Silicon Labs, 8bit CIP-51, EFM8UB Microcontroller, 50MHz, 16 kB Flash, 20-Pin QFN

Currently unavailable
We don’t know if this item will be back in stock, it is being discontinued by the manufacturer.
Packaging Options:
RS Stock No.:
865-6327
Mfr. Part No.:
EFM8UB10F16G-B-QFN20
Brand:
Silicon Labs
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Brand

Silicon Labs

Family Name

EFM8UB

Package Type

QFN

Mounting Type

Surface Mount

Pin Count

20

Device Core

CIP-51

Data Bus Width

8bit

Program Memory Size

16 kB

Maximum Frequency

50MHz

RAM Size

2.304 kB

USB Channels

1

Number of SPI Channels

1

Number of I2C Channels

1

Number of UART Channels

2

Typical Operating Supply Voltage

2.2 → 3.6 V

Number of USART Channels

0

Number of CAN Channels

0

Dimensions

3 x 3 x 0.55mm

Number of Ethernet Channels

0

Number of PCI Channels

0

Program Memory Type

Flash

Instruction Set Architecture

MCU

Maximum Number of Ethernet Channels

0

Minimum Operating Temperature

-40 °C

ADCs

1 (11 x 12 bit)

Length

3mm

Number of ADC Units

1

Maximum Operating Temperature

+85 °C

Width

3mm

Height

0.55mm

Number of LIN Channels

0

Pulse Width Modulation

1

EFM8UB Universal Bee Microcontrollers, Silicon Labs


The Universal Bee Microcontroller (MCU) family are designed for USB applications. Operating at up 50 MHz with a pipelined 8-bit C8051 core.

Up to 22 multifunction, 5 V tolerant I/O pins
Low energy USB support
Priority crossbar for flexible pin mapping
12-bit Analogue to Digital converter (ADC)and 2 analogue comparators with internal voltage DAC as reference input
5 16-bit timers
Integrated temperature sensor
2 UARTs, SPI and SMBus/I2C master/slave and I2C slave


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.