STLM20 Temperature Sensor for 3G Phones from STMicroelectronics
Posted in Measurement, Mobile Devices, SensorOn Sunday, November 26, 2006
STMicroelectronics announced a precision temperature sensor with an ultra-low supply current requirement of less than 4.3-microamps (typical) and a tiny 4-lead UDFN package, making it ideal for 3G cell phones. The new STLM20 is the lowest-current drop-in replacement for industry-standard LM20 devices, and is the first in a new series of precision temperature sensors from ST.
Picture: STLM20 Temperature Sensor for 3G Phones
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The new device is an analog-output temperature sensor operating over a –55 to +130 degrees C temperature range. At 25 degrees C the precision sensor’s temperature-to-voltage accuracy is plus or minus 1.5 degrees C, and it is plus/minus 2.5 degrees C over the entire operating temperature range. The STLM20 is supplied in a tiny 1.0mm x 1.3mm x 0.5mm thick 4-lead UDFN package – as well as in 5-lead SOT323 (SC70) – to meet the demands of space constrained products.
Operating from a supply voltage of 2.4V to 5V, the STLM20 draws a maximum of 8µA over the full temperature range. It is targeted for the RF section of 3G mobile phones and multimedia PDAs, monitoring transmitter power amplifiers to guarantee linearity as required by the W-CDMA (Wideband Code Division Multiple Access) 3G standards. The STLM20 is also suitable for temperature-compensated crystal oscillators and battery chargers and other portable applications, such as GPS devices and medical instruments.
Here you can download Datasheet of STLM20 Temperature Sensor (PDF, 144 kb)
The STLM20 is available now, priced at $0.25 in high volumes.
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