Microchip, 8bit AVR, ATmega Microcontroller, 16MHz, 64 kB Flash, 32-Pin TQFP

Subtotal (1 tray of 250 units)*

£1,050.00

(exc. VAT)

£1,260.00

(inc. VAT)

Add to Basket
Select or type quantity
In Stock
  • Plus 750 unit(s) shipping from 01 December 2025
Need more? Click ‘Check delivery dates’ to find extra stock and lead times.
Units
Per unit
Per Tray*
250 +£4.20£1,050.00

*price indicative

RS Stock No.:
146-3223
Mfr. Part No.:
ATMEGA64M1-AU
Brand:
Microchip
Find similar products by selecting one or more attributes.
Select all

Brand

Microchip

Family Name

ATmega

Package Type

TQFP

Mounting Type

Surface Mount

Pin Count

32

Device Core

AVR

Data Bus Width

8bit

Program Memory Size

64 kB

Maximum Frequency

16MHz

RAM Size

4.096 kB

USB Channels

0

Number of PWM Units

0

Number of SPI Channels

0

Typical Operating Supply Voltage

2.7 → 5.5 V

Number of USART Channels

0

Number of I2C Channels

0

Number of CAN Channels

0

Number of UART Channels

0

Height

1.05mm

Number of PCI Channels

0

Program Memory Type

Flash

Maximum Operating Temperature

+85 °C

Width

7.1mm

Minimum Operating Temperature

-40 °C

Dimensions

7.1 x 7.1 x 1.05mm

Instruction Set Architecture

RISC

Number of ADC Units

1

Maximum Number of Ethernet Channels

0

Pulse Width Modulation

1 (1 Channel)

ADCs

11 x 10 bit

Length

7.1mm

Number of LIN Channels

0

Number of Ethernet Channels

0

Data Rate

1000kbit/s

The high-performance, low-power Microchip 8-bit AVR RISC-based microcontroller combines 64KB ISP flash memory with read-while-write capabilities, 2KB EEPROM, 4KB SRAM, 27 general purpose I/O lines, 32 general purpose working registers, one motor power stage controller, two flexible timer/counters with compare modes and PWM, one UART with HW LIN, an 11-channel 10-bit A/D converter with two differential programmable gain input stages, a 10-bit D/A converter, a programmable watchdog timer with internal individual oscillator, SPI serial port, an on-chip debug system, and four software selectable power saving modes. The device operates between 2.7-5.5 volts. By executing powerful instructions in a single clock cycle, the device achieves throughputs approaching 1 MIPS per MHz, balancing power consumption and processing speed.

Related links