List of common microcontrollers
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of common microcontrollers listed by brand.
[edit] AMCC
Until May 2004, these µCs were developed and marketed by IBM, whose 4xx family was sold to Applied Micro Circuits Corporation.
- 403 PowerPC CPU
- PPC 403GCX
- 405 PowerPC CPU
- PPC 405EP
- PPC 405GP/CR
- PPC 405GPr
- PPC NPe405H/L
- 440 PowerPC Book-E CPU
- PPC 440GP
- PPC 440GX
- PPC 440EP/EPx/GRx
- PPC 440SP/SPe
[edit] Altera
- Nios II 32-bit configurable soft microprocessor
- Nios 16-bit configurable soft processor
[edit] Analog Devices
- Blackfin
- Super Harvard Architecture Single-Chip Computer (SHARC)
- TigerSHARC
- ADSP-21xx digital signal processor
[edit] Atmel
- AT89 series (Intel 8051 architecture)
- AT90, ATtiny, ATmega series (AVR architecture) (Atmel Norway design)
- AT91SAM (ARM architecture)
- AVR32 (32-bit AVR architecture)
- MARC4
[edit] Charmed Labs
- Qwerk
- XPort
[edit] Cypress MicroSystems
- CY8C2xxxx (PSoC)
[edit] Dallas Semiconductor
[edit] EPSON Semiconductor
- 4-bit Microcomputers S1C60/62/63 family
- 8-bit Microcomputers S1C88 family
- 16-bit Microcomputers S1C17 family
- 32-bit Microcomputers S1C33 family
[edit] Freescale Semiconductor
Until 2004, these µCs were developed and marketed by Motorola, whose semiconductor division was spun-off to establish Freescale.
- 8-bit
- 16-bit
- 68HC12 (CPU12)
- 68HC16 (CPU16)
- Freescale DSP56800 (DSPcontroller)
- 32-bit
- Freescale 683XX
- MPC500
- MPC 860 (PowerQUICC)
- MPC 8240/8250 (PowerQUICC II)
- MPC 8540/8555/8560 (PowerQUICC III)
[edit] Fujitsu
- F²MC Family (8/16 bit)
- FR Family (32 bit)
- FR-V Family (32 bit RISC)
[edit] Holtek
Holtek Semiconductor is a Taiwan based designer of 8-bit microcontrollers and peripheral products. Located in the Hsinchu Science Park the company's product range includes the following microcontroller device series:
- HT48FXX Flash I/O type series
- HT48RXX I/O type series
- HT46RXX A/D type series
- HT49RXX LCD type series
- HT82XX Computer Peripheral series
- HT95XX Telecom Peipheral series
- HT86XX Voice series
[edit] Infineon
- 8-bit
- XC800 family
- C500/C800 family
- 16-bit
- C166 family
- C167 family
- XC167 family
- 32-bit
[edit] Intel
- 8-bit
- 16-bit
- MCS-96 (8096 family – also incl. 8061)
- Intel MCS 296
[edit] Lattice Semiconductor
- Mico8 8 bit soft microprocessor
- Mico32 32 bit soft microprocessor
[edit] Microchip Technology
Microchip produces microcontrollers with 3 very different architectures:
8-bit (8 bit data bus) PICmicro, with a single accumulator (8 bits):
- PIC10 and PIC12: 12-bit instruction words
- PIC16 series: 14-bit instruction words, one address pointer ("indirect register pair")
- PIC18 series: 16-bit instruction words, three address pointers ("indirect register pairs")
16-bit (16-bit data bus) microcontrollers, with 16 general-purpose registers (each 16-bit)
- PIC24: 24-bit instruction words
- dsPIC: based on PIC24, plus DSP functions, such as a single-cycle MAC (multiply-accumulate) into two 40-bit accumulators.
32-bit (32 bit data bus) microcontrollers:
- PIC32MX series: 32 bit instructions, uses the MIPS architecture
[edit] National Semiconductor
[edit] NEC
[edit] Parallax
- SX
- These were formerly made by Ubicom. The SX die is still manufactured by Ubicom, who send it to Parallax for packaging
- SX-18, 20, 28, 48 and 52 versions (Note that the SX-18 and SX-52 have been discontinued)
- Parallax's SX series is an 8 bit microcontroller which has unusually high speed, up to 75 MHz (75 MIPS), and a high degree of flexibility. Andre LaMothe has proven that the SX-52 can actually be clocked to 80 MHz (80 MIPS) even though the specs say 75 MHz is the maximum. He has used the SX-52 in thousands of XGameStation development computers all running at 80 MHz. Some users have referred to these microcontrollers as PICs on steroids. While Parallax's SX micros are limited in variety, their high speed and additional resources allow programmers to create 'virtual devices', including complete video controllers, as required. Refer to Parallax's Web site for information, as they are the sole distributor of these devices.
- Propeller
[edit] Philips Semiconductors
- LPC3000
- LPC2000
[edit] Rabbit Semiconductor
- Rabbit 2000
- Rabbit 3000
- Rabbit 4000
[edit] Renesas Technology
Renesas is a joint venture of Hitachi and Mitsubishi Electric.
[edit] Silabs
Manufactures a line of 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.
- C8051F300
- QFN11 package(3x3 mm), 25 MIPS, 8kB Flash Memory, 256B RAM, 8 I/O, UART, SMBus, 3 timers, 8 bit 8 ch 500kbs ADC, temperature sensor, Comparator.
- C8051F120
[edit] Silicon Motion
- SM2XX Family - Flash Memory Card Controllers
- SM321 - USB 2.0
- SM323 - USB 2.0
- SM323E - USB 2.0
- Silicon Motion's SM321E and SM324 controllers support SLC and MLC NAND flash from Samsung, Hynix, Toshiba and ST Micro as well as flash products from Renesas, Infineon and Micron. The SM321E is available in a 48-pin LQFP package and a 44-pin LGA package. The SM321E supports up to 4 SLC or MLC NAND flash chips with 4 bytes / 528 bytes ECC
- SM324 - USB 2.0
- Supports dual-channel data transfer at read speeds of 233x (35 MB/s) and write speeds of 160x (24 MB/s), making it the fastest USB 2.0 flash disk controller in the market. The SM324 also has serial peripheral interface (SPI) which allows for not only Master and Slave modes, but the flexibility to develop more functionality into USB flash disk (UFD) products such as GPS, fingerprint sensor, Bluetooth and memory-capacity display. The SM324 is available in a 64-pin LQFP package. The SM324 supports 8 SLC or MLC NAND flash chips with 4 bytes / 528 bytes ECC.
- SM330 - USB 2.0
- SM501 - Mobile Graphics
- SM712 - Mobile Graphics
- SM722 - Mobile Graphics
- SM340 - MP3/JPEG
- SM350 - MP3/JPEG
- SM370 - Image processing
[edit] STMicroelectronics
- ST6 (8 bit)
- ST7 (8 bit)
- μPSD (8032 - 8 bit)
- ST10 (16 bit)
- STM32 (ARM Cortex M3 - 32 bit)
- STR7 (ARM7TDMI - 32 bit)
- STR9 (ARM966E-S - 32 bit)
[edit] Texas Instruments
- TMS370 (8-bit)
- MSP430 (16-bit)
[edit] Toshiba
[edit] Western Design Center
[edit] Ubicom
- IP2022
- IP3022
- IP3022 is Ubicom's latest high performance 32bit processor running at 250 MHz featuring 8 hardware threads (barrel processor). It is specifically targeted at Wireless Routers.
[edit] Xemics
- XE8000 8-bit microcontroller family
[edit] Xilinx
- Microblaze 32 bit soft microprocessor
- Picoblaze 8 bit soft microprocessor
[edit] ZiLOG
Zilog's (primary) microcontroller families, in chronological order:
- Older:
- Zilog Z8 - 8-bit Harvard architecture ROM / EPROM / OTP microcontroller with on-chip SRAM.
- Zilog Z180 - Z80 based microcontroller; on-chip peripherals; external memory; 1 MB address space.
- Newer:
- Zilog eZ8 - Better pipelined Z8 (2-3 times as clock cycle efficient as original Z8) with on-chip flash memory and SRAM.
- Zilog eZ80 - Fast 8/16/24-bit Z80 (3-4 times as cycle efficient as original Z80) with flash, SRAM, peripherals; linear addressing of 16 MB.
- Zilog Z16 - Fast 8/16/32-bit CPU with compact object code; 16 MB (4GB possible) addressing range; flash, SRAM, peripherals, on chip.

