Home › Magazines › 2007 › March › From 5 to 3.3 V

From 5 to 3.3 V

Design tip

Published in issue 363, March 2007

Many microcontrollers these days are powered from 3.3 V (or oven lower voltages) instead of the old, familiar 5 V. Lowering the dissipation and increasing the switching speed are the main considerations for reducing the power supply voltage. In addition, the ever continuing miniaturisation results in transistors inside the ICs that are so small that the breakdown-voltage has become much lower and a 5-V power supply would cause problems.

Click below to download a pdf copy of this article from Elektor magazine.

 

Downloads 

PDF Article (U070375.pdf)
10 Elektor Credits

Subscribe now

Subscribe to our free
E-weekly Newsletter!

Enter your Email address:

Follow Elektor

      

Act now!

FAQ

Before submitting questions, review our FAQ section!

Bestseller

Microprocessor Design using Verilog HDL

This book is a practical guide to processor design in the real world. It presents the Verilog HDL in an easily digestible fashion and serves as a thorough introduction about reducing a computer architecture and instruction set to practice. 

Package Deals

Elektor Bundles

Check our Package Deals and save money! Discounts up to 19% now available!

Price Slashed

Elektor OSPV

This Open Source People Vehicle is perfect for factory halls, warehouses, hospitals, colleges, schools etc.

Elektor PCBs at 25% OFF