Magnetic Sensors - Linear, Compass (ICs)

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
DRV5053PAQDBZT

DRV5053PAQDBZT

Texas Instruments

SENSOR HALL ANALOG SOT23-3

680

DRV5053EAEDBZTQ1

DRV5053EAEDBZTQ1

Texas Instruments

SENSOR HALL ANALOG SOT23-3

480

DRV5057Z4QDBZR

DRV5057Z4QDBZR

Texas Instruments

LINEAR HALL EFFECT SENSOR WITH D

2997

DRV5053CAELPGMQ1

DRV5053CAELPGMQ1

Texas Instruments

DRV5053-Q1 AUTOMOTIVE, 2.7 V TO

23920

DRV5053EAQLPGM

DRV5053EAQLPGM

Texas Instruments

SENSOR HALL EFFECT ANALOG TO92-3

954

DRV5056A4QLPGM

DRV5056A4QLPGM

Texas Instruments

SENSOR HALL EFFECT ANALOG

0

DRV5057A1QDBZR

DRV5057A1QDBZR

Texas Instruments

DRIVER

0

DRV5053OAQLPG

DRV5053OAQLPG

Texas Instruments

SENSOR HALL EFFECT ANALOG TO92-3

1168

DRV5053CAQLPGMQ1

DRV5053CAQLPGMQ1

Texas Instruments

DRV5053-Q1 AUTOMOTIVE, 2.7 V TO

17915

DRV5056Z4QDBZR

DRV5056Z4QDBZR

Texas Instruments

RATIOMETRIC UNIPOLAR LINEAR HALL

2977

DRV5053PAQDBZR

DRV5053PAQDBZR

Texas Instruments

SENSOR HALL ANALOG SOT23-3

0

DRV5055A1EDBZRQ1

DRV5055A1EDBZRQ1

Texas Instruments

DRIVER

1204

DRV5053VAQDBZRQ1

DRV5053VAQDBZRQ1

Texas Instruments

DRV5053-Q1 AUTOMOTIVE, 2.7 V TO

38345

DRV5053EAQDBZR

DRV5053EAQDBZR

Texas Instruments

SENSOR HALL ANALOG SOT23-3

2235

DRV5057A3EDBZRQ1

DRV5057A3EDBZRQ1

Texas Instruments

HALL SENSOR

2945

DRV5057A3QLPG

DRV5057A3QLPG

Texas Instruments

SENSOR HALL EFFECT PWM

972

DRV5053CAELPGQ1

DRV5053CAELPGQ1

Texas Instruments

SENSOR HALL EFFECT ANALOG TO92-3

963

DRV5053VAQLPGQ1

DRV5053VAQLPGQ1

Texas Instruments

SENSOR HALL EFFECT ANALOG TO92-3

992

DRV5053RAEDBZTQ1

DRV5053RAEDBZTQ1

Texas Instruments

SENSOR HALL ANALOG SOT23-3

750

DRV5057A1QLPG

DRV5057A1QLPG

Texas Instruments

DRIVER

1000

Magnetic Sensors - Linear, Compass (ICs)

1. Overview

Magnetic sensors - linear compass ICs are semiconductor devices that detect magnetic fields and convert them into electrical signals. These integrated circuits provide precise measurement of magnetic field direction and strength in linear axes, enabling 2D/3D orientation detection. Their importance spans multiple industries due to their ability to provide contactless position sensing, navigation capabilities, and magnetic field monitoring in compact form factors.

2. Main Types & Functional Classification

Type Functional Features Application Examples
Hall Effect Sensors Voltage output proportional to magnetic field strength, simple design Current sensing, proximity detection
Anisotropic Magnetoresistance (AMR) Sensors High sensitivity (0.1 accuracy), low power consumption Electronic compasses, navigation systems
Giant Magnetoresistance (GMR) Sensors Ultra-high sensitivity (nanotesla range), wide bandwidth Biomedical devices, industrial position control
Tunneling Magnetoresistance (TMR) Sensors Lowest power consumption, excellent thermal stability IoT devices, automotive safety systems

3. Structure & Composition

Typical construction includes: - Sensing element (Hall plate/AMR film/TMR junction) - Signal conditioning circuitry (amplifiers, ADCs) - Temperature compensation modules - Digital interface (I2C/SPI) Packaged in LGA/QFN formats (2-8mm sizes) with magnetic shielding layers. Advanced versions integrate sensor fusion algorithms for 3-axis measurement.

4. Key Technical Specifications

Parameter Description & Importance
Sensitivity (mV/Gauss) Determines minimum detectable field strength
Resolution ( T/LSB) Affects angle measurement precision (critical for navigation)
Operating Temperature (-40 to +125 C) Defines environmental suitability
Power Consumption ( A/mA) Crucial for battery-powered devices
Interface Type I2C/SPI for digital output, analog for raw signals

5. Application Fields

Main industries include: - Consumer Electronics: Smartphone compasses, AR/VR headsets - Automotive: EPS systems, vehicle detection - Industrial: Robotics, CNC machine tool positioning - Aerospace: Drone stabilization systems - Medical: Surgical tool tracking

6. Leading Manufacturers & Products

Manufacturer Product Series Key Specifications
STMicroelectronics LIS3MDL 50 Gauss range, 0.08 T/LSB, I2C/SPI
Honeywell HMC5883L 80 Hz bandwidth, 2-4 Gauss accuracy
NXP Semiconductors MFX7755 3D sensing, 0.1 heading accuracy
TDK-InvenSense ICM-20948 9-axis MEMS+mag, 0.15 mA operating current

7. Selection Guidelines

Key consideration factors: - Required measurement axis (2D vs 3D) - Environmental conditions (temperature, vibration) - Power budget constraints - Required accuracy vs cost trade-offs - Interface compatibility with host system - Calibration requirements (hard/soft iron compensation)

8. Industry Trends

Current development directions: - Integration with MEMS IMUs for sensor fusion - AI-based self-calibration algorithms - Sub-10 A ultra-low power consumption - Increased radiation hardness for space applications - Development of 4D magnetic field-time sensors

RFQ BOM Call Skype Email
Top