Evaluation Kit for ZSSC3241
The ZSSC3241KIT Evaluation Kit provides the hardware needed for configuration, calibration and evaluation of the ZSSC3241 Sensor Signal Conditioner (SSC) IC. The user's...
The ZSSC3241 is a sensor signal conditioning IC (SSC) for highly accurate amplification, digitization, and sensor-specific correction of resistive sensor signals. The ZSSC3241 provides best-in-class sensor-element adaptability, and it is suitable for bridge and half-bridge sensors, as well as external voltage-source element and single-element sensors in multiple configurations. Digital compensation of the sensor offset, sensitivity, temperature drift, and non-linearity is accomplished via a 26-bit math core running a correction algorithm with calibration coefficients stored in a non-volatile, reprogrammable memory. A second, separate compensation for gain and offset, and digital-output independent analog-output correction is supported for optimum adaptability of dual-domain (analog and digital) sensor solutions. The programmable, integrated sensor front-end allows optimally applying various sensors for a broad range of applications.
New functions vs. ZSSC3240
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Type | Title | Date |
Datasheet | PDF 1.57 MB | |
Application Note | PDF 1014 KB | |
White Paper | PDF 385 KB | |
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The ZSSC3241KIT Evaluation Kit provides the hardware needed for configuration, calibration and evaluation of the ZSSC3241 Sensor Signal Conditioner (SSC) IC. The user's...
Schematic symbols, PCB footprints, and 3D CAD models from SamacSys can be found by clicking on products in the Product Options table. If a symbol or model isn't available, it can be requested directly from the website.
Renesas’ ZSSC3241 is a powerful Sensor Signal Conditioner (SSC) with analog and digital output, on-chip diagnostics, industrial voltage range and an embedded DSP core. The solution targets high-end applications such as industrial, medical, and consumer sensing for a wide variety of sensor platform designs.
Flexible Interface of the ZSSC3241 Enables Bridge as Temperature Sensor | Blog Post | May 24, 2023 |