TI Microcontroller Tackles Safety Critical Apps

Charles Murray

September 7, 2011

1 Min Read
TI Microcontroller Tackles Safety Critical Apps

A new platform of 34 microcontrollers (MCUs) from Texas Instruments is targeted at safety-critical applications ranging from motor control and factory automation to automotive power steering and antilock braking.

Background: Microcontroller manufacturers are increasingly rolling out new products designed to address the needs of fault-tolerant and fail-safe products. Such products must be able to handle random, unpredictable failures and must support certification of safety standards.

Safety MCUs are already available from a variety of vendors, including Renesas Electronics, Infineon Technologies, Freescale Semiconductor, and Texas Instruments, among others. Their products are typically aimed at aerospace, medical, industrial and automotive applications. "These devices are a good sell into the aerospace and automotive markets," said Adib Ghubril, research director and analyst for the Semiconductor Group at Gartner Inc.

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What: Texas Instruments is rolling out the Hercules safety microcontroller platform, which consists of three distinct families: Hercules RM4X family, based on dual ARM Cortex-RF4 cores; Hercules TMS570 family, also based on dual ARM Cortex-RF4; and the Hercules TMS470M family, based on an ARM Cortex-M3 core. RM4X serves high-performance applications, such as motor control, industrial automation, and medical, while the TMS570 targets such applications as automotive stability control and vehicle electrification.

The TMS470M is TI's value line and is targeted at antilock braking, power steering, and passive safety applications, among many others. "These are for applications that must work," Ghubril said. "Dual core is an advantage because you have one core that's doing the work and another that's checking it."

Price: Hercules MCUs range from $4.60 to $15.70 in quantities of 10,000. Development kits range from $79 to $199.

For further reading: Search for microcontrollers on Datasheets.com.

About the Author(s)

Charles Murray

Charles Murray is a former Design News editor and author of the book, Long Hard Road: The Lithium-Ion Battery and the Electric Car, published by Purdue University Press. He previously served as a DN editor from 1987 to 2000, then returned to the magazine as a senior editor in 2005. A former editor with Semiconductor International and later with EE Times, he has followed the auto industry’s adoption of electric vehicle technology since 1988 and has written extensively about embedded processing and medical electronics. He was a winner of the Jesse H. Neal Award for his story, “The Making of a Medical Miracle,” about implantable defibrillators. He is also the author of the book, The Supermen: The Story of Seymour Cray and the Technical Wizards Behind the Supercomputer, published by John Wiley & Sons in 1997. Murray’s electronics coverage has frequently appeared in the Chicago Tribune and in Popular Science. He holds a BS in engineering from the University of Illinois at Chicago.

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