From WikiChip
Am186E - AMD
< amd
Revision as of 15:44, 1 June 2016 by ChipIt (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{amd title|Am186E}} {{ic family | title = AMD Am186E | image = | caption = | no image = | developer = AMD | manufacturer...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

AMD Am186E
no photo (ic).svg
Developer AMD
Manufacturer AMD
Type Microcontrollers
Introduction October 1996 (announced)
October 1996 (launch)
Production 1996
Architecture Am186 core with memory and additional controllers
ISA x86-16
µarch 80186
Word size 16 bit
2 octets
4 nibbles
Process 350 nm
0.35 μm
3.5e-4 mm
Technology CMOS
Package TQFP-100, PQFP-100
Succession
Am186

Am186E is a family of 16-bit microcontrollers that incorporated the Am186 core along with some RAM and a number of other application-specific controllers.

Overview

With low-density SRAM (less than 4 Megabit) on the decline in the mid 1990s, the typical off-the-shelf setup would require 64K SRAM in a 2 x 32K setup to satisfy the 186's 16-bit external data bus. For the average system that would mean twice the general SRAM needed. AMD's introduced a series of microcontrollers that integrated 32K RAM on-die combined with their Am186 core fabricated on their new 350 nm process. Later AMD introduced a number of other series which included various other peripheral controllers such as USB and communication controller.

Members

Am186ER

The Am186ER series were first introduced in October of 1996. These MCUs incorporated the Am186 32 kB of internal SRAM, non-multiplexed address bus, two independent DMA channels, programmable interrupt controller (6 interrupts), three 16-bit timers, and power saving mode.

Facts about "Am186Ex - AMD"
core nameAm186 +
designerAMD +
first announcedOctober 1996 +
first launchedOctober 1996 +
full page nameamd/am186ex +
instance ofmicrocontroller family +
instruction set architecturex86-16 +
main designerAMD +
manufacturerAMD +
microarchitecture80186 +
nameAMD Am186E +
packageTQFP-100 + and PQFP-100 +
process350 nm (0.35 μm, 3.5e-4 mm) +
technologyCMOS +
word size16 bit (2 octets, 4 nibbles) +