Epson Toyocom Corporation’s U.S.-based Timing Products Division has announced the development of the world’s smallest* real-time clock modules. The maximum dimensions of the new RTC modules, known as the RX-4571BD and RX-8571BD, are just 3.4 mm x 1.7 mm x 1.0t mm.
With a footprint and cubic volume that are 43% and 52% smaller, respectively, than those of conventional real-time clock modules in an LC package, the new real-time clock modules will help electronic equipment manufacturers further downsize their products while boosting performance. Samples of the new RX-8571BD will be available in April 2009.
Size comparison between the newly developed RX-4571BD/RX-8571BD and the conventional RX-4571LC/RX-8571BD
In recent years, all manner of electronic equipment, from compact portable devices such as digital cameras and personal healthcare products to office and factory automation equipment, have seen explosive growth in functions, features and performance, coupled with lower power budgets. Not coincidentally, there is strong — and growing — market demand for thin, space-saving, low-power components. To meet this demand, Epson Toyocom has developed and is on target to commercializing the RX-4571BD and RX-8571BD real-time clock modules, which are in high demand for time and date data management applications.
The RX-4571BD supports a 3-wire serial interface, while the RX-8571BD is I2C-Bus(*1) interface compliant. The RX-4571BD and RX-8571BD, equipped with an ultra-compact QMEMS(*2) crystal chip, are the world’s smallest real-time clock modules with built-in crystal units. Epson Toyocom was able to diminish the size of these modules by using a new structure that applies Epson Toyocom’s original NPO (New Platform Oscillator) structure(*3), wherein a crystal unit in a ceramic package is sealed together with an oscillation circuit in a molded plastic housing. Combining a compact crystal unit with a real-time clock IC, rather than providing them separately, significantly shrinks the module’s real estate requirements.
With a crystal unit built into an ultra-compact package along with clock and calendar circuitry that operates at low voltage, the modules provide and manage the clock and calendar data for electronic devices at low power. In Standby, the RX-4571BD consumes 0.32 µA of current, while the RX-8571BD consumes just 0.22 µA (at 3 V, respectively).
The RX-4571BD and RX-8571BD help customers add value to their systems by using space more efficiently in feature-rich electronic equipment and by helping extend the time their equipment can run on a battery or charge. The modules will also pay dividends in the form of greater system reliability and quality, since the crystal unit’s characteristics are assured prior to shipment, alleviating the need for customers to design oscillation circuits or adjust output frequencies.
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