Analog to Digital Converters (ADC)

Analog-to-digital converters (ADC, A/D, or A-to-D) sample an analog signal, such as a sound picked up by a microphone or the output of a sensor, into a digital signal. Typically, the digital output is a two's complement binary number that is proportional to the input. Input types may be differential, pseudo differential or single-ended. ADCs are selected by number of bits, sampling rate, number of inputs, interface, number of converters, and the architecture such as adaptive delta, dual slope, folding, pipelined, SAR, Sigma-Delta or two-step.


Texas Instruments ADC34J43IRGZT

IC ADC 14BIT PIPELINED 48VQFN

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Texas Instruments ADC14C105CISQE/NOPB

IC ADC 14BIT PIPELINED 32WQFN

0

Texas Instruments ADC14C105CISQ/NOPB

IC ADC 14BIT PIPELINED 32WQFN

65.41

Texas Instruments ADC12C170CISQ/NOPB

IC ADC 12BIT PIPELINED 48WQFN

0

Texas Instruments ADS62C15IRGCT

IC ADC 11BIT PIPELINED 64VQFN

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Texas Instruments ADS4229IRGCT

IC ADC 12BIT PIPELINED 64VQFN

0

Texas Instruments ADS62P43IRGCT

IC ADC 14BIT PIPELINED 64VQFN

0

Texas Instruments ADS6225IRGZT

IC ADC 12BIT PIPELINED 48VQFN

0