Silicon Labs, 8bit CIP-51, EFM8SB Microcontroller, 25MHz, 8 kB Flash, 24-Pin QFN

Subtotal (1 tube of 91 units)*

£33.761

(exc. VAT)

£40.495

(inc. VAT)

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Units
Per unit
Per Tube*
91 +£0.371£33.76

*price indicative

RS Stock No.:
169-0188
Mfr. Part No.:
EFM8SB10F8G-A-QFN24
Brand:
Silicon Labs
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Brand

Silicon Labs

Family Name

EFM8SB

Package Type

QFN

Mounting Type

Surface Mount

Pin Count

24

Device Core

CIP-51

Data Bus Width

8bit

Program Memory Size

8 kB

Maximum Frequency

25MHz

RAM Size

512 B

USB Channels

0

Number of SPI Channels

1

Number of USART Channels

0

Number of I2C Channels

1

Number of UART Channels

1

Typical Operating Supply Voltage

2.4 V

Number of CAN Channels

0

Number of PCI Channels

0

Program Memory Type

Flash

Number of Ethernet Channels

0

Number of LIN Channels

0

Height

0.75mm

Minimum Operating Temperature

-40 °C

Width

4.1mm

Dimensions

4.1 x 4.1 x 0.75mm

Pulse Width Modulation

1

Maximum Number of Ethernet Channels

0

Instruction Set Architecture

MCU

Number of ADC Units

1

Maximum Operating Temperature

+85 °C

ADCs

10 x 12 bit

Length

4.1mm

COO (Country of Origin):
MY

EFM8SB Sleepy Bee Microcontrollers, Silicon Labs


The Sleepy Bee Microcontroller (MCU) family are deigned for low power and battery powered systems. Operating at up to 25 MHz with short wakeup times and low power consumption in both active and sleep modes.

8051 MCU core
Integrated temperature sensor
Integrated LDO maintains low active current at all voltages
Up to 14 capacitive sense channels
UART and I2C
4 16-bit timers


The EFM8 8-bit microcontroller family has an unparalleled combination of features and capabilities including a high-speed pipelined 8051 core, ultra-low power, precision analogue and enhanced communication peripherals, integrated oscillators, small-footprint packages, and a crossbar architecture that enables flexible digital and analogue multiplexing to simplify PCB design and I/O signal routing. These next-generation 8-bit devices are aimed at the engineer developing products for the Internet-of-Things (IoT) which will be very small, perform complex processing and run off tiny batteries.