List of common microcontrollers

This is a list of common microcontrollers listed by brand.

Altera

Analog Devices

Atmel

Cypress Semiconductor

Main article: PSoC
Cypress PsoC chips

Maxim Integrated

ELAN Microelectronics Corp.

ELAN Microelectronics Corporation is an IC designer and provider of 8-bit microcontrollers and PC Peripheral ICs. Headquartered in Hsinchu Science Park, the Silicon Valley of Taiwan, ELAN's microcontroller product range includes the following:

These are clones of the 12- and 14-bit Microchip PIC line of processors, but with a 13-bit instruction word.

EPSON Semiconductor

Freescale Semiconductor

Motorola MC68HC11

Until 2004, these µCs were developed and marketed by Motorola, whose semiconductor division was spun off to establish Freescale.

Fujitsu

See Spansion

Holtek

Holtek Semiconductor is a major Taiwan-based designer of 32-bit microcontrollers, 8-bit microcontrollers and peripheral products. Microcontroller products are centred around an ARM core in the case of 32-bit products and 8051 based core and Holtek's own core in the case of 8-bit products. Located in the Hsinchu Science Park (), the company's product range includes the following microcontroller device series:

Hyperstone

Infineon

Infineon offers microcontrollers for the automotive, industrial and multimarket industry. DAVE3, a component based auto code generation free tool, provides faster development of complex embedded projects.

Intel

See main article

X On-chip code memory
0 No on-chip memory
3 OTP
7 EEPROM
9 Flash

Lattice Semiconductor

Microchip Technology

PIC microcontrollers
PIC24 microcontroller

Microchip produces microcontrollers with three very different architectures:

8-bit (8-bit data bus) PICmicro, with a single accumulator (8 bits):

16-bit (16-bit data bus) microcontrollers, with 16 general-purpose registers (each 16-bit)

32-bit (32-bit data bus) microcontrollers:

National Semiconductor

NEC

NXP Semiconductors

NXP LPC1114 and LPC1343

Panasonic

Parallax

Rabbit Semiconductor

Renesas Electronics

Renesas is a joint venture comprising the semiconductor businesses of Hitachi, Mitsubishi Electric and NEC Electronics, creating the largest microcontroller manufacturer in the world.

Rockwell

Rockwell semiconductors (now called Conexant) created a line of 6502 based microcontrollers that were used with their telecom (modem) chips. Most of their microcontrollers were packaged in a QIP package.

Silicon Laboratories

Manufactures a line of 8-bit 8051-compatible microcontrollers, notable for high speeds (50–100 MIPS) and large memories in relatively small package sizes. A free IDE is available that supports the USB-connected ToolStick line of modular prototyping boards. These microcontrollers were originally developed by Cygnal. In 2012, the company introduced ARM-based mixed-signal MCUs with very low power and USB options, supported by free Eclipse-based tools. The company acquired Energy Micro in 2013 and now offers a number of ARM-based 32-bit microcontrollers.

Silicon Motion

Sony

Spansion

Microcontrollers acquired from Fujitsu:

STMicroelectronics

STM32F103VGT6 die
STM32F100C4T6B die

Texas Instruments

The Stellaris and Tiva families, in particular, provide a high level of community-based, open source support through the TI e2e forums.[3][4]

Toshiba

Ubicom

Xemics

Xilinx

XMOS

ZiLOG

Zilog's (primary) microcontroller families, in chronological order:

Sortable table

Company name Name CPU Bits Status Max. MHz Flash KB RAM KB Price @1K USD Active power Sleep power External mem. UARTs SPI I2C CAN Ethernet USB ADCs DACs Features
Energy Micro EFM32TG110 ARM Cortex-M3 32 Production 32 32 4 $2.47 157 μA/MHz @ 32 MHz 1μA 2 2 1 0 0 1 1 2× 16-bit timers. 12-bit 1 Msps ADC. 12-bit 500 ksps DAC.
Zilog eZ80 Fast Z80 8/16 Production 50 256 16 $7.79 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Linear addressing up to 16 MB. 3–4× faster than traditional Z80.

References

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