Browsing Category
Automotive
Automotive engineering refers to the application of mechanical, electrical, software and safety engineering in the design, manufacturing and operation of vehicles such as motorcycles, automobiles, buses and trucks. This also includes the development of electric and autonomous vehicles.
Wireless Connectivity Chips Added To Broadcom Automotive Portfolio
Broadcom Corporation announced two new connectivity chips in its automotive portfolio. Broadcom's automotive-grade…
Autonomous Features in Electric Vehicles Can Save $1,800 in Battery Costs
Self-driving cars are hot right now, but in addition to helping make drivers' lives easier, they can also help make…
Pulse-Proof Thick-Film Chip Resistors From Vishay Are Sulfur-Resistant
Vishay Intertechnology released a new series of thick film chip resistors that provides pulse-proof performance and…
Automotive Inductive-Load Driver From Diodes Saves Space & Cost
The DMN61D8LVTQ dual-channel inductive-load driver introduced by Diodes Incorporated is designed for automotive…
36V Linear Regulator Seamlessly Transitions Between Buck & Boost
Linear Technology Corporation introduces the LTM8054, a 36VIN (40Vmax) 5.4A µModule (micromodule) regulator in…
Synchronous Linear Buck Regulator Consumes Just 7µA Quiescent
Linear Technology LT8631 is a 1A, 100V input capable synchronous step-down switching regulator. Synchronous…
Keysight Solution for APIX2 Physical Layer Testing for High-Resolution In-Car…
Keysight Technologies announced that its new APIX2 compliance application offers the capability to characterize and…
MicrochipThermocouple IC From Integrates Multiple Devices On One Chip
Microchip announces the MCP9600, the world’s first thermocouple-conditioning integrated circuit to combine…
MIT Demonstrates Self-Driving Golf Carts To Navigate Public Parks
Since autonomous vehicles are such an up-and-coming technology, MIT researchers decided to experiment with…
TI’s LDC1101 1.8V Inductance-To-Digital Converter
Mouser is now stocking the LDC1101 inductance-to-digital converter (LDC) from Texas Instruments (TI).