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List of common

microcontrollers

This is a list of common microcontrollers listed by


brand.

Altera
Nios II 32-bit configurable soft microprocessor
Nios 16-bit configurable soft processor

Analog Devices
Blackfin
Super Harvard Architecture Single-Chip Computer
(SHARC)
TigerSHARC
ADSP-21xx digital signal processor
MicroConverter Family – ARM7 and 8052 cores

Atmel
Atme

In 2016, Atmel was sold to Microchip Technology.

AT89 series (Intel 8051 architecture)


AT90, ATtiny, ATmega, ATxmega series (AVR
architecture) (Atmel Norway design)
AT91SAM (ARM architecture)
AVR32 (32-bit AVR architecture) (Atmel Norway
design)
MARC4

Cypress Semiconductor

Cypress PsoC chips

CY8C2xxxx (PSoC1 ), M8C


CY8C3xxxx (PSoC3 ), 8051
CY8C4xxxx (PSoC4), ARM Cortex-M0
CY8C5xxxx (PSoC5 ), ARM Cortex-M3
Psoc (Programmable system on CHIP)

ELAN Microelectronics Corp.


ELAN Microelectronics Corporation is an IC designer
and provider of 8-bit microcontrollers and PC
Peripheral ICs. Headquartered in Hsinchu Science
Park, the Silicon Valley of Taiwan, ELAN's
microcontroller product range includes the following:

EM78PXXX Low Pin-Count MCU Family


EM78PXXX GPIO Type MCU Family
EM78PXXXN ADC Type MCU Family

These are clones of the 12- and 14-bit Microchip PIC


line of processors, but with a 13-bit instruction word.

EPSON Semiconductor
4-bit
S1C6x family
8-bit
S1C88 family
16-bit
S1C17 family
32-bit
S1C33 family

Espressif Systems
Espressif Systems, a company with headquarters in
Shanghai, China made their debut in the
microcontroller scene with their range of inexpensive
and feature-packed WiFi microcontrollers such as
ESP8266.

32-bit
ESP8266
ESP32

Freescale Semiconductor

Motorola MC68HC11

Until 2004, these µCs were developed and marketed


by Motorola, whose semiconductor division was
spun off to establish Freescale.
8-bit
Freescale S08
68HC05 (CPU05)
68HC08 (CPU08)
68HC11 (CPU11)
16-bit
Freescale S12
68HC12 (CPU12)
68HC16 (CPU16)
Freescale DSP56800 (DSPcontroller)
32-bit
Freescale Kinetis (ARM architecture)
Freescale 683XX
MCF5xxx (Freescale Coldfire)
M·CORE
MPC500
MPC 860 (PowerQUICC)
MPC 8240/8250 (PowerQUICC II)
MPC 8540/8555/8560 (PowerQUICC III)
MPC 5554/5566
MPC 5777
Fujitsu
See Spansion

Holtek
Holtek Semiconductor is a major Taiwan-based
designer of 32-bit microcontrollers, 8-bit
microcontrollers and peripheral products.
Microcontroller products are centred around an ARM
core in the case of 32-bit products and 8051 based
core and Holtek's own core in the case of 8-bit
products. Located in the Hsinchu Science Park ([1] ),
the company's product range includes the following
microcontroller device series:

HT32FXX 32-bit ARM core microcontroller series


HT85FXX 8051 Core based microcontroller series
HT48FXX Flash I/O type series
HT48RXX I/O type series
HT46RXX A/D type series
HT49RXX LCD type series
HT82XX Computer Peripheral series
HT95XX Telecom Peripheral series
HT68FXX I/O Type Flash series
HT66FXX A/D Type Flash series
HT32XX 32-bit ARM core series

Hyperstone
32-bit Hyperstone RISC-microprocessor

In�neon
Infineon offers microcontrollers for the automotive,
industrial and multimarket industry. DAVE3 , a
component based auto code generation free tool,
provides faster development of complex embedded
projects.

8-bit
XC800 family Based on the 8051 architecture
the XC800 is divided into the A-(Automotive)
and I-(Industrial) Family, providing low cost
micros, for example applied in applications
like body, safety, motor control, intelligent
lighting and electro mobility
16-bit
XE166 family, a Real Time Signal Controller
applied in industrial applications
XC 2000 family, designed for Automotive
applications
C166 family
C167 family
32-bit
Infineon XMC4000 [2] is an ARM Cortex M4F
based microcontroller family for industrial
applications.
TriCore™ family is based on a unified
RISC/MCU/DSP processor core. Infineon
launched the first generation of AUDO
(Automotive unified processor) in 1999. The
TC1782 is the first member of the AUDO MAX
family designed for automotive applications
Infineon XMC1000 [3] is a 32-bit Industrial
Microcontroller ARM® Cortex™-M0, 32 MHz.
Infineon Embedded Power Relay Driver IC
(TLE984x ) - ARM® Cortex™-M0 based family
for automotive applications
Infineon Embedded Power 2-Phase Bridge
Driver IC (TLE986x ) - ARM® Cortex™-M3
based family for Brushed DC Motors
Infineon Embedded Power 3-Phase Bridge
Driver IC (TLE987x ) - ARM® Cortex™-M3
based family for Brushless DC Motors

Intel
→ See main article

8-bit
MCS-48 8048 family – also incl. 8035, 8038,
8039, 8040, 8X42, 8X49, 8050; X=0 or 7
MCS-51 8051 family – also incl. 8X31, 8X32,
8X52; X=0, 3, 7 or 9
MCS-151 High performance 8051 instruction
set/binary compatible family
8/16-bit/32-bit
MCS-251 32-bit ALU with 1/8/16/32-bit CISC
instruction set and 24-bit external address
space (16-bit wide segmented). Fully binary
compatible to the 8051 8-bit family.
16-bit
MCS-96 (8096 family – also incl. 8061)
Intel MCS-296
X On-chip code memory

0 No on-chip memory

3 OTP

7 EEPROM

9 Flash
Lattice Semiconductor
Mico8 8-bit soft microprocessor
Mico32 32-bit soft microprocessor

Maxim Integrated
8051 Family
MAXQ RISC Family
Secure Micros Family
ARM 922T
MIPS 4kSD

Microchip Technology

PIC microcontrollers

PIC24 microcontroller
Microchip produces microcontrollers with three very
different architectures:

8-bit (8-bit data bus) PICmicro, with a single


accumulator (8 bits):

PIC10 and PIC12: 12-bit instruction words


PIC16 series: 14-bit instruction words, one address
pointer ("indirect register pair")
PIC16F628 (Replacement for very popular but
discontinued PIC16F84) – PIC16F84A is still
in production as of May 17, 2014.
PIC18 series: 16-bit instruction words, three
address pointers ("indirect register pairs")

16-bit (16-bit data bus) microcontrollers, with 16


general-purpose registers (each 16-bit)

PIC24: 24-bit instruction words


dsPIC: based on PIC24, plus DSP functions, such
as a single-cycle MAC (multiply–accumulate) into
two 40-bit accumulators.

32-bit (32-bit data bus) microcontrollers:

PIC32MM Series: 16/32-bit instructions, uses the


MIPS32 microAptiv UC Core MIPS architecture
PIC32MX series: 32-bit instructions, uses the
MIPS32 M4K Core[1] MIPS architecture
PIC32MZ series: 32-bit instructions, uses the
MIPS32 M-Class Core[2] MIPS architecture

National Semiconductor
COP400 (4-bit)
COP8
CR16

NEC
4-bit
17K
75X
75XL
8-bit
87XL
87AD
78K Family (8/16-bit)
8-bit: 78K/1, 78K/2, 78K/0, 78K0S
16-bit: 78K/3, 78K/6, 78K/4, 78K0R
32-bit
V60–V80
V810/V830
V850

NXP Semiconductors

NXP LPC1114 and LPC1343

NXP LPC2387

8-bit
LPC700, LPC900 series are 80C51-based
16-bit
XA
32-bit
ARM7
LPC2100, LPC2200, LPC2300, LPC2400
series
ARM9
LPC2900, LPC3100, LPC3200 series
ARM Cortex-M0
LPC1100, LPC1200 series
ARM Cortex-M0+
LPC800 series
ARM Cortex-M3
LPC1300, LPC1700, LPC1800 series
ARM Cortex-M4
LPC4000, LPC4300 series
ARM Cortex-M7
RT1050, RT1050 series

Nuvoton Technology
8-bit
8051 MCUs
32-bit
ARM Cortex-M0 MCUs
ARM Cortex-M4 MCUs

Panasonic
Panas

List of Panasonic Microcontrollers /


microcomputers
4-bit
MN1400
MN1500
MN1700
8-bit
MN1870
MN1880
AM1 (MN101)
16-bit
AM2 (MN102)
32-bit
AM3, AM32 (MN1030, MN103, MN103E,
MN103L, MN103S, MN103H)
Parallax
Basic Stamp
SX
These were formerly made by Ubicom, former
Scenix Semiconductor. The SX die has been
discontinued by Ubicom. Parallax has
accumulated a large stock of the dies and is
managing the packaging.
SX-18, 20, 28, 48 and 52 versions (Note that
the SX-18 and SX-52 have been discontinued)
Propeller
The Propeller is a 8-core 32-bit microcontroller
with 32 KB internal RAM.

Rabbit Semiconductor
Rabbit 2000
Rabbit 3000
Rabbit 4000
Rabbit 5000
Rabbit 6000

Renesas Electronics
Renesas is a joint venture comprising the
semiconductor businesses of Hitachi, Mitsubishi
Electric and NEC Electronics, creating the largest
microcontroller manufacturer in the world.

4-bit microcontrollers
720
8-bit microcontrollers
78K0
78K0S
740
16-bit microcontrollers
RL78
78K0R
R8C
M16C
H8S
H8
H8/Super Low Power
32-bit microcontrollers
RH850
RX
SuperH
V850
R32C
M32C
M32R
H8SX

Redpine Signals
RS14100
RS13100

Rockwell
Rockwell semiconductors (now called Conexant)
created a line of 6502 based microcontrollers that
were used with their telecom (modem) chips. Most
of their microcontrollers were packaged in a QIP
package.

R6501
R6511
R8070

Silicon Laboratories
Manufactures a line of 8-bit 8051-compatible
microcontrollers, notable for high speeds
(50–100 MIPS) and large memories in relatively
small package sizes. A free IDE is available that
supports the USB-connected ToolStick line of
modular prototyping boards. These microcontrollers
were originally developed by Cygnal. In 2012, the
company introduced ARM-based mixed-signal MCUs
with very low power and USB options, supported by
free Eclipse-based tools. The company acquired
Energy Micro in 2013 and now offers a number of
ARM-based 32-bit microcontrollers.

8-bit
C8051
32-bit
ARM Cortex-M0+
EFM32 Zero
ARM Cortex-M3
EFM32 Tiny, Gecko, Leopard, Giant
ARM Cortex-M4
EFM32 Wonder

Silicon Motion
SM2XX – Flash memory card controllers
SM321 – USB 2.0
SM323 – USB 2.0
SM323E – USB 2.0
Silicon Motion's SM321E and SM324
controllers support SLC and MLC NAND flash
from Samsung, Hynix, Toshiba and ST Micro
as well as flash products from Renesas,
Infineon and Micron. The SM321E is available
in a 48-pin LQFP package and a 44-pin LGA
package. The SM321E supports up to 4 SLC
or MLC NAND flash chips with 4 bytes / 528
bytes ECC
SM324 – USB 2.0
Supports dual-channel data transfer at read
speeds of 233× (35 MB/s) and write speeds of
160× (24 MB/s), making it the fastest USB 2.0
flash disk controller in the market. The SM324
also has serial peripheral interface (SPI) which
allows for not only Master and Slave modes,
but the flexibility to develop more functionality
into USB flash disk (UFD) products such as
GPS, fingerprint sensor, Bluetooth and
memory-capacity display. The SM324 is
available in a 64-pin LQFP package. The
SM324 supports 8 SLC or MLC NAND flash
chips with 4 bytes / 528 bytes ECC.
SM325 – USB 2.0
SM330 – USB 2.0
SM501, SM502 – Mobile Graphics
SM712 – Mobile Graphics
SM722 – Mobile Graphics
SM340 – MP3/JPEG
SM350 – MP3/JPEG
SM370 – Image processing

Sony
SPC700 series
SPC900 series
SPC970 series
SR110 series

Spansion
Microcontrollers acquired from Fujitsu:

F²MC Family (8/16-bit)


FR Family (32-bit RISC)
FR-V Family (32-bit RISC VLIW/Vector processor)
FM3 (Cortex M3)
FM4 (Cortex M4)
FCR4 (Cortex R4 with 90 nm Spansion Flash)

STMicroelectronics

STM32F103VGT6 die

STM32F100C4T6B die

8-bit
ST6
ST7
STM8 (STM8 Website) , (STM8 Information) .
μPSD (8032)
16-bit
ST10
32-bit
PowerPC
SPC5 32-bit Automotive microcontrollers
integrating ST’s proprietary embedded
Flash technology.
ST20
ARM7
STR7 (ARM7TDMI)
ARM9
STR9 (ARM966E-S)
ARM Cortex-M (STM32 Family (STM32
Website) )
ARM Cortex-M0
STM32 F0
ARM Cortex-M0+
STM32 L0
ARM Cortex-M3
STM32 F1, F2, L1, W
ARM Cortex-M4
STM32 F3, F4, L4
ARM Cortex-M7
STM32 F7, H7

Texas Instruments
8-bit
TMS370
16-bit
MSP430
32-bit
MSP432
TMS320 (DSP)
C2000
Stellaris (ARM Cortex-M3)
Tiva™ C Series
Hercules – TMS570 (ARM Cortex-R4),
TMS470M ARM Cortex-M3, RM4 ARM Cortex-
R4

The Stellaris and Tiva families , in particular, provide


a high level of community-based, open source
support through the TI e2e forums .[3][4]

Toshiba
TLCS-47 (4-bit)
TLCS-870 (8-bit CISC)
TLCS-900 (16 and 32-bit CISC)
TX19A (32-bit RISC)
Ubicom
IP2022
Ubicom's IP2022 is a high performance
(120 MIPS) 8-bit microcontroller. Features
include: 64k flash code memory, 16 KB PRAM
(fast code and packet buffering), 4 KB data
memory, 8-channel A/D, various timers, and
on-chip support for Ethernet, USB, UART, SPI
and GPSI interfaces.
IP3022
IP3022 is Ubicom's latest high performance
32bit processor running at 250 MHz featuring
eight hardware threads (barrel processor). It is
specifically targeted at Wireless Routers.

Xemics
XE8000 8-bit microcontroller family

Xilinx
Microblaze 32-bit soft microprocessor
Picoblaze 8-bit soft microprocessor

XMOS
XCore XS1 32-bit, Multicore Microcontrollers
ZiLOG
Zilog's (primary) microcontroller families, in
chronological order:

Older:
Zilog Z8 – 8-bit Harvard architecture ROM /
EPROM / OTP microcontroller with on-chip
SRAM.
Zilog Z180 – Z80 based microcontroller; on-
chip peripherals; external memory; 1 MB
address space.
Newer:
Zilog eZ8 – Better pipelined Z8 (2–3 times as
clock cycle efficient as original Z8) with on-
chip flash memory and SRAM.
Zilog eZ80 – Fast 8/16/24-bit Z80 (3–4 times
as cycle efficient as original Z80) with flash,
SRAM, peripherals; linear addressing of
16 MB.
Zilog Z16 – Fast 8/16/32-bit CPU with
compact object code; 16 MB (4 GB possible)
addressing range; flash, SRAM, peripherals, on
chip.
Sortable table
Price
Company Max. Flash RAM Active Sleep External
Name CPU Bits Status @1K UARTs SPI I2C
name MHz KB KB power power mem.
USD

157
ARM
Energy μA/MHz
EFM32TG110 Cortex- 32 Production 32 32 4 $2.47 1μA 2 2 1
Micro @
M3
32 MHz

Fast
Zilog eZ80 8/16 Production 50 256 16 $7.79 1 1 1
Z80

References
1. "PIC32MX Family Architecture Overview" .
Architecture - 32-bit PIC Microcontrollers |
Microchip Technology Inc. - Architecture | 32-Bit
PIC- MCUs | Microchip Technology Inc .
Microchip. Retrieved 2016-05-18.
2. "PIC32MZ Family Architecture Overview" .
Architecture - 32-bit PIC Microcontrollers |
Microchip Technology Inc. - Architecture | 32-Bit
PIC- MCUs | Microchip Technology Inc .
Microchip. Retrieved 2016-05-18.
3. "TI introduces simple-to-use OpenLink™
Bluetooth® and Wi-Fi® connectivity inside the
WiLink™ 6.0 solution for AM18x Sitara™ ARM®
Microprocessors" . PRNewswire. Retrieved
23 May 2012.
4. "BeagleBone, $89 Open Source Hardware
Platform Features TI Sitara™ AM335x ARM
Cortex™-A8 MPU" . Avnet. Retrieved 23 May
2012.

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