Atmel expands automotive qualified MaXTouch controller family

Date
10/14/2012

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Industry first gloved finger touch supports up to 7 inch touch pads

MaXTouch controller diagram

Atmel Corp has announced new automotive-qualified maXTouch controllers for in-car control systems. These new devices will bring today's smartphone experience into contemporary cars, even for drivers wearing gloves. Expanding the Atmel portfolio of maXTouch automotive-qualified devices, the new mXT143E and mXT224E touch controllers are designed for small automotive touchscreens and touchpads up to 7 inches in diameter, such as center stack displays, navigation systems, radio HMIs (human-machine interfaces) and rear-seat entertainment systems. By addressing smaller screen and touch-pad sizes, the mXT143E and mXT224E controllers complement the company's growing family of automotive-qualified touchscreen controllers supporting screens/pads from 2 to 12 inches in diameter. With these new automotive-qualified maXTouch devices, Atmel strengthens its position as a market-leading touch innovator and supplier. The maXTouch family is known for its superior performance and rich feature set, including unlimited touches, fast response time, touch precision, robust operation and low power consumption. Dedicated embedded functionality for automotive The mXT143E and mXT224E are fully automotive-qualified according to AEC-Q100. The touchscreen controllers provide embedded functionalities that meet specific automotive design requirements, including high-temperature behavior and reliable operation in harsh environments and with gloved fingers. The high signal-to-noise ratio of 80:1 makes these devices ideal for very noisy environments. The devices provide full support for gloved hand operation on automotive touchscreens and pads. The mXT143E and mXT224E embed X/Y position calculation as well as post-processing algorithms such as eliminating unintended touches. With touchscreens and pads based on these new maXTouch controllers, users can perform multi-touch gestures (pinch, stretch, etc.), while unintended touches, such as a resting hand on the screen, are rejected. The devices feature true 12-bit touch functionality with independent X/Y tracking for up to 10 concurrent touches in real-time, allowing for the highest linearity and accuracy. Adaptation to high-resolution displays is easy and quick. The user-configurable ratio of X and Y lines supports a variety of aspect ratios from 4:3 to 16:9. "Atmel brings the consumer touch experience into the automobile, even when drivers are wearing gloves," said Stephan Thaler, marketing director for automotive touch products, Atmel Corporation. "With the new mXT143E and mXT224E devices, also smaller automotive touch applications, such as touchscreens and curved touchpads in the center stack, are made possible with just one single controller, reducing development time, system complexity and cost for the system designer." Additional maXTouch capabilities targeting automotive applications include frequency hopping during burst generation, self calibration, detect integration addressing EMI/EMC requirements and high reliability in harsh environments. With a scan speed of up to 280Hz, design engineers can provide character recognition for alpha-numeric inputs to the automotive HMI interfaces, another key feature for modern cars. Availability Samples of automotive-qualified mXT143E and mXT224E touch controllers are available now in TQFP48 packages. Mass production will start the end of October 2012. Demo kits for both devices are also available to support design-in and shorten time to market. Atmel

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