24-Bit IC Delivers Total, Precision Data Acquisition

May 10, 2004
By integrating analog and digital cores on the same piece of silicon, the Burr-Brown Division of Texas Instruments created a low-cost and high-performance precision data-acquisition system-on-a-chip. The MSC1200 delivers performance levels for in...

By integrating analog and digital cores on the same piece of silicon, the Burr-Brown Division of Texas Instruments created a low-cost and high-performance precision data-acquisition system-on-a-chip. The MSC1200 delivers performance levels for in industrial process control, portable instrumentation, and test and measurement applications.

Residing on-chip are a 24-bit sigma-delta ADC, an enhanced 8051 processor core, an offset DAC, flash memory, a precision voltage reference oscillator, an eight-channel multiplexer, a PLL, a PGA with gains up to 128, and a temperature sensor. It also contains selectable buffered inputs and selectable output data rates, a programmable single-cycle settling filter, on-chip calibration, and low-voltage detection and brownout reset capabilities.

Specifications include low noise of 75 nV and a 1-ksample/s rate. Two flash-memory size options are available: 4 or 8 kbytes. The microcontroller core contains two dual data pointers, 128 bytes of SRAM, four I/O ports, a 32-bit accumulator, a universal asynchronous receiver/transmitter (UART) port, two timer/counters, I2C and serial peripheral interfaces, and a watchdog timer.

The MSC1200 comes in a 48-pin TQFP, operating from a single power supply of 2.7 V to 4.25 V and dissipating 3 mW. In 1000-unit lots, it costs $5.95 each (MSC1200Y2 with 4 kbytes of flash memory) and $6.45 each (MSC1200Y3 with 8 kbytes of flash memory).

Texas Instruments Inc. www.ti.com

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About the Author

Roger Allan

Roger Allan is an electronics journalism veteran, and served as Electronic Design's Executive Editor for 15 of those years. He has covered just about every technology beat from semiconductors, components, packaging and power devices, to communications, test and measurement, automotive electronics, robotics, medical electronics, military electronics, robotics, and industrial electronics. His specialties include MEMS and nanoelectronics technologies. He is a contributor to the McGraw Hill Annual Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. He is also a Life Senior Member of the IEEE and holds a BSEE from New York University's School of Engineering and Science. Roger has worked for major electronics magazines besides Electronic Design, including the IEEE Spectrum, Electronics, EDN, Electronic Products, and the British New Scientist. He also has working experience in the electronics industry as a design engineer in filters, power supplies and control systems.

After his retirement from Electronic Design Magazine, He has been extensively contributing articles for Penton’s Electronic Design, Power Electronics Technology, Energy Efficiency and Technology (EE&T) and Microwaves RF Magazine, covering all of the aforementioned electronics segments as well as energy efficiency, harvesting and related technologies. He has also contributed articles to other electronics technology magazines worldwide.

He is a “jack of all trades and a master in leading-edge technologies” like MEMS, nanolectronics, autonomous vehicles, artificial intelligence, military electronics, biometrics, implantable medical devices, and energy harvesting and related technologies.

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