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ON Semi to Showcase its Advances in IoT Tech at Embedded World

February 23, 2016 by Jeff Shepard

ON Semiconductor will be exhibiting highlights from its expansive range of solutions relating to the Internet of Things (IoT) at the Embedded World conference (held in Nuremberg Messe between 23rd and 25th February). Visitors may experience interactive and informative demos at the company's booth (5.178). ON will demonstrate the new NB3H63143G small form factor, low power, low cost one-time programmable (OTP) clock generator, a member of the OmniClock family of devices that support any output frequency from 8 kHz to 200 MHz in addition to offering a rich feature set and utmost operational flexibility.

OmniClock generators have three single-ended clock outputs (LVCMOS/LVTTL), two of which can be combined into a differential output (LVPECL/LVDS/HCSL/CML), allowing designers to replace multiple crystals and/or oscillators, reducing overall system cost. The devices are available in a 3x3mm QFN 16 package which integrates three individual output enable (OE) pins as well as three individual output voltage (VDDO) pins and a smaller 2x2mm DFN 8 package for applications with little available board space.

“The OmniClock family offers the most features and flexibility of any programmable clock devices available in the market today,” said Prescott Sakai, director of ON Semiconductor’s timing products business unit. “They enable customers to meet their system’s low power requirements while at the same time substantially simplifying board design and the overall system bill-of-materials."

To support the connectivity that will be vital to next generation applications like IoT, ON Semiconductor will also be displaying its latest wireless devices. The NCS36510 is highly integrated system-on-chip (SoC) for the implementation of secure wireless networks with the minimum of external components. It incorporates a 2.4 GHz IEEE 802.15.4-2006 compliant transceiver, a 32-bit ARM® Cortex®-M3 microprocessor, a true random number generator, plus RAM and Flash memory resources.

The AX5043 narrowband, ultra-low power RF transceiver supports frequency-shift keying (FSK) and amplitude-shift keying (ASK) modulation. It delivers 16 decibels-milliwatt (dBm) of output power and -136 dBm sensitivity at 100 bits per second (bps) FSK. Other demonstrations will include smart passive sensors, Sigfoxâ„¢ functionality, BLDC motor control and touch level sensing.

“There are many possibilities for IoT and so far the industry has just started to fully explore them,” explains Ryan Cameron, vice president, industrial and timing products at ON Semiconductor. “By offering a wealth of hardware for IoT implementation, including microcontrollers, RF transceivers, camera systems and clock generators, we are enabling design engineers to take their ideas on IoT systems from the concept phase and make them a reality.”