Finepower develops core module for wireless charging infrastructure of the future
Before electric cars can become a means of transport for everyone, a charging infrastructure needs…
Before electric cars can become a means of transport for everyone, a charging infrastructure needs…
Microchip announces a flexible PLC modem which supports multiple standard and proprietary protocols used globally…
Portable battery-powered devices such as earbuds, smartwatches, and gaming controllers are expected to deliver long-lasting…
New 100-Mbps single-pair Ethernet PHY with SGMII support enables designers to pack more capability and intelligence into their automotive network designs
In March 2018 the Applied Power Electronics Conference (APEC) took place in San Antonio (Texas). APEC is the world’s largest convention dedicated to applied power electronics, and the place where research laboratories, universities, market analysts and companies showcase the latest and often ‘industry first’ technologies that make power supplies more efficient, reliable and safer. This year’s event was definitely the real ‘kick-off’ point for the wide bandgap semiconductors and especially the ones based on Gallium Nitride (GaN). It was also a symbolic milestone for a technology called ‘Digital Power’ that emerged in 2003 as a promising technology. As it was for digital power 15 years ago, GaN started its journey five years ago, and following a similar path is moving gradually from a ‘technical curiosity’ to a ‘commercial product’. Digital power and GaN are both technologies that have been highly debated and challenged when introduced to the market and it is interesting to link both of them in this way, especially when the outcome of combining the best of the two technologies will result in truly outstanding commercial products.
Rutronik Elektronische Bauelemente GmbH will be occupying booth 628 in hall 9 at this year’s…
MAX32660 and MAX32652, based on the low-power Arm Cortex-M4F, are ideal for wearable sensors and battery-powered applications
Würth Elektronik eiSos and Infineon present wireless power development system 200-W-WPT
Nano Energy technology facilitates long-term operation of up to ten years on a single coin battery
Two new FET drivers benefit nanosecond LIDAR applications and 50-MHz DC/DC converters