Microchip Technology Introduces New Low Pincount PIC® MCUs That Offer Engineers Superior System-Level Performance

Microchip PIC16F684 PIC16F688 PIC12F683

Microchip Continues Its Domination of the Low Pincount Flash Market With the Introduction of Its New PIC Microcontrollers

Dec. 1, 2003- Microchip Technology Inc. announced three new PIC® Flash 8-bit microcontrollers (MCUs), which provide unprecedented system-level performance and cost-effectiveness in 8- and 14-pin packages. The PIC16F684, PIC16F688 and PIC12F683 MCUs offer designers up to 7,168 bytes of Flash program memory and several peripheral options with integrated nanoWatt technology. These new devices are well suited for a range of applications including home appliances, battery-operated or handheld products, sensors, interface, automotive and general-purpose control functions.

With the PIC16F684, PIC16F688 and PIC12F683 MCUs, Microchip's customers have an easy, pin-compatible migration path from the "classic" 8- and 14-pin devices to these new "enhanced" low pincount products. In addition, these devices offer the familiar x14 architecture, along with standardized features that include a wide operating voltage of 2.0 - 5.5 volts and on-board EEPROM Data Memory.

Standard analog peripherals on the three new PIC devices include up to 8 channels of 10-bit A/D for easy measurement of analog signals, and up to 2 comparators as general-purpose building blocks for analog input/output control. The PIC12F683 comes with Microchip's standard Capture/Compare/PWM module, and the PIC16F688 features a EUSART peripheral that will support standard RS232/485-type communications as well as the LIN protocol, which is popular in automotive body electronics and dashboard controls.

The PIC16F684 features an Enhanced Capture Compare module with deadband control, up to 4 outputs and emergency shutdown, all of which improves control capabilities in applications such as electronic motor control and power supplies.

Microchip's existing 8- and 14-pin Flash devices already offer nanoWatt technology features such as nanoAmp standby current consumption, a fast-startup internal oscillator operating at 8MHz (+/- 1%), and BOR reset for reliable operation. The new "enhanced" low pincount PIC MCUs offer additional power-management features such as software-selectable clock speed, software-controlled BOR, ultra-low-power wakeup on change, a lower-power Real Time Clock timer and an extended

Watchdog Timer. These features provide customers with unmatched flexibility in managing power consumption and performance, without sacrificing system reliability in battery-operated and other low-power applications.

These new PIC devices also provide designers with the most advanced and reliable Flash memory technology available - Microchip's PMOS Electrically Erasable Cell (PEEC) Flash technology. PEEC Flash increases reliability through in-field reprogrammability that can withstand one million erase/write cycles on each memory location at a wide range of operating temperatures.

Availability and Development Tool Support
The three new PIC microcontrollers come in small-footprint 8-pin SOIC and 14-pin TSSOP packages. The PIC16F684 is currently available for sampling and volume production. This release is expected to be followed by sampling of the PIC16F688 in December, and sampling for the PIC12F683 is planned for early 2004.

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