
Monitoring DC anode current of a grounded
... although operation under higher background illumination, as due to the presence of some backscattered Moon light, for example, is not excluded. Under these circumstances, a variation of the anode DC current by a factor 30 or more is expected. To avoid the consequent increase of pulse-gain with high ...
... although operation under higher background illumination, as due to the presence of some backscattered Moon light, for example, is not excluded. Under these circumstances, a variation of the anode DC current by a factor 30 or more is expected. To avoid the consequent increase of pulse-gain with high ...
MAX15003 Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing General Description
... down to 0.6V and delivers up to 15A for each output with excellent load and line regulation. The MAX15003 is optimized for high-performance, small-size power management solutions. The options of coincident tracking, ratiometric tracking, and output sequencing allow the tailoring of the powerup/power ...
... down to 0.6V and delivers up to 15A for each output with excellent load and line regulation. The MAX15003 is optimized for high-performance, small-size power management solutions. The options of coincident tracking, ratiometric tracking, and output sequencing allow the tailoring of the powerup/power ...
TPA0162: 2.8-W Stereo Audio Power Amplifier with Digital Volume
... delivering 2.8 W of continuous RMS power per channel into 3-Ω loads. This device minimizes the number of external components needed, which simplifies the design and frees up board space for other features. When driving 1 W into 8-Ω speakers, the TPA0162 has less than 0.22% THD+N across its specified ...
... delivering 2.8 W of continuous RMS power per channel into 3-Ω loads. This device minimizes the number of external components needed, which simplifies the design and frees up board space for other features. When driving 1 W into 8-Ω speakers, the TPA0162 has less than 0.22% THD+N across its specified ...
3.3 V Dual-Loop 50 Mbps to 1.25 Gbps Laser Diode Driver ADN2848
... The FAIL and DEGRADE outputs have an internal 30 kΩ pullup resistor that is used to pull the digital high value to VCC. However, the alarm output can be overdriven with an external resistor, allowing alarm interfacing to non-VCC levels. Non-VCC alarm output levels must be below the VCC used for the ...
... The FAIL and DEGRADE outputs have an internal 30 kΩ pullup resistor that is used to pull the digital high value to VCC. However, the alarm output can be overdriven with an external resistor, allowing alarm interfacing to non-VCC levels. Non-VCC alarm output levels must be below the VCC used for the ...
Transistor–transistor logic

Transistor–transistor logic (TTL) is a class of digital circuits built from bipolar junction transistors (BJT) and resistors. It is called transistor–transistor logic because both the logic gating function (e.g., AND) and the amplifying function are performed by transistors (contrast with RTL and DTL).TTL is notable for being a widespread integrated circuit (IC) family used in many applications such as computers, industrial controls, test equipment and instrumentation, consumer electronics, synthesizers, etc. The designation TTL is sometimes used to mean TTL-compatible logic levels, even when not associated directly with TTL integrated circuits, for example as a label on the inputs and outputs of electronic instruments.After their introduction in integrated circuit form in 1963 by Sylvania, TTL integrated circuits were manufactured by several semiconductor companies, with the 7400 series (also called 74xx) by Texas Instruments becoming particularly popular. TTL manufacturers offered a wide range of logic gate, flip-flops, counters, and other circuits. Several variations from the original bipolar TTL concept were developed, giving circuits with higher speed or lower power dissipation to allow optimization of a design. TTL circuits simplified design of systems compared to earlier logic families, offering superior speed to resistor–transistor logic (RTL) and easier design layout than emitter-coupled logic (ECL). The design of the input and outputs of TTL gates allowed many elements to be interconnected.TTL became the foundation of computers and other digital electronics. Even after much larger scale integrated circuits made multiple-circuit-board processors obsolete, TTL devices still found extensive use as the ""glue"" logic interfacing more densely integrated components. TTL devices were originally made in ceramic and plastic dual-in-line (DIP) packages, and flat-pack form. TTL chips are now also made in surface-mount packages. Successors to the original bipolar TTL logic often are interchangeable in function with the original circuits, but with improved speed or lower power dissipation.