Atmosic Technologies and Nichicon Corporation Join Forces to Revolutionize IoT with Sustainable Energy Harvesting Solutions
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Hrishikesh
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September 26, 2023
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Business, Internet of Things
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Atmosic Technologies, BlueTooth, energy harvesting, environmental sustainability, Green Technology, innovation, IoT, Nichicon Corporation, Rechargeable Batteries, Sustainable Technology, Wireless SoC
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Atmosic Technologies and Nichicon Corporation, two leading innovators in the field of sustainable IoT solutions, have announced a groundbreaking partnership aimed at revolutionizing the Internet of Things (IoT) industry. In a significant step towards creating more sustainable and efficient IoT devices, Atmosic Technologies and Nichicon Corporation have joined forces to provide developers with an innovative energy harvesting solution tailored specifically …
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New Release: Texas Instruments CC1312R SimpleLink™ Wireless MCUs
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Hrishikesh
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March 27, 2020
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Controllers and Processors, News, Wireless
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Energy, energy harvesting, gateways, Internet of Things, Smart Grid Technology, Technology, texas instruments, wireless, wireless sensor network
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0 Comments
Texas Instruments CC1312R SimpleLink™ Wireless MCUs target Wireless M-Bus, IEEE 802.15.4g, IPv6-enabled smart objects (6LoWPAN), KNX RF, Wi-SUN®, and proprietary systems, including the TI 15.4-Stack. The CC1312R has a very low active RF and microcontroller (MCU) current. It also has sub-µA sleep current with up to 80KB of parity protected RAM retention. This provides excellent battery life and allows operation …
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Ultra-low current consumption linear battery charger
The STBC15 is a linear charger thin film battery with a maximum charging current of 40 mA. The device uses a CC/CV algorithm to charge the battery. Thanks to the ultra-low consumption architecture, the charger is suitable for low-capacity cells such as thin film batteries and can use low energy sources such as energy harvesters. A 5 V input like …
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IoT nodes that last for years – Small storage cells
Energy storage cells designed by Murata specifically for wireless sensor nodes are powered by energy harvesting Rather than using supercapacitor technology, which the firm decided is too leaky, it went for a lithium ion electro-chemical system -like a phone battery but modified to extend cycle-life, broaden temperature range, reduce self-discharge, and raise power delivery. To get these improvements, Murata sacrificed …
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