Sensors
Powerful and accurate 2D LiDAR sensor
With its LMS4000, SICK has developed its most powerful and accurate 2D LiDAR sensor to date for materials handling and intralogistics applications, even at high speeds, in low ambient light or when goods, packages or parcels are matt black or glossy.
Reinforced isolated amplifier with high CMTI for voltage sensing
The AMC1311 from Texas Instruments is a precision, isolated amplifier with an output separated from the input circuitry by an isolation barrier that is highly resistant to magnetic interference. This barrier is certified to provide reinforced galvanic isolation of up to 7 kVPEAK according to VDE V 0884-11 and UL1577.
Highly integrated optical sensors project successfully completed
ams has announced the successful completion of the Highly Integrated Optical Sensors Project. The €4.3 million HIOS project aims to enable ams and its consortium partners, the process and equipment suppliers APC, Boschman and Bühler Leybold Optics, to stay at the forefront of sensor integration and drive competitiveness in their respective markets.
Develop, connect, expand: TI wireless sensor kit
Expanding upon TI's LaunchPad ecosystem, the new LaunchPad SensorTag kit (LPSTK-CC1352R) offers integrated environmental and motion sensors, multi-band wireless connectivity and easy-to-use software to help you prototype your next connected application.
Plug & Trust for secure sensor authentication
NXP's EdgeLock SE050 is used for secure sensor authentication enabling full end-to-end security from the sensor to the cloud or a local gateway.
Getting started with hall-effect sensors using the MAX9921
The world that we live in today contains millions of sensors that continue to revolutionise the way we live, move and interact with each other and nowhere else have we seen the sudden rise more than in our automobiles.
How to connect a TEMT6000 light sensor to DK IoT Studio
The ability to measure and record ambient light levels is a common and useful sensing function for many IoT projects.
Automotive imaging radar using TI mmWave sensors
There is still some confusion in the industry about the different roles that three major sensor types - camera, radar and LIDAR - have in a vehicle, and how each can solve the sensing needs of ADAS and autonomous driving.
Single-chip radar for diverse proximity-sensing applications
The AWR1443 millimetre wave (mmWave) sensor from Texas Instruments is a highly integrated 76 to 81GHz radar device that serves as a single-chip radar solution suitable for proximity-sensing automotive radar applications.
Single-chip mmWave sensor integrating processing capability
The IWR6843 is an integrated single chip mmWave sensor based on FMCW radar technology capable of operation in the 60GHz to 64GHz band. It is built with TI’s low power 45nm RFCMOS process and enables unprecedented levels of integration in an extremely small form factor.