8051 Family
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The Intel 8051 is a single chip microcontroller which was developed by Intel in 1980 for use in embedded systems. It has become very popular in the 80s, but today many manufacturer proposes enhanced version that are 8051-compatible.
Architecture
Speed
- Standard 8051:
- Supported clock frequencies: 12MHz, 16MHz, 20MHz, and 24MHz.
- Clock cycles per instructions: 12 (ie. all instructions takes a multiple of 12 oscillation periods).
- Optimized 8051 (source: NXP):
- Supported clock frequencies: from 7MHz to 40MHz.
- Clock cycles per instructions: 2 (LPC900 family), 6 (LPC700 and 80C51 family), 12(80C51).
Links
- The 8051 on Wikipedia.
- My links on Del.icio.us.
- A website on 8051/8052 controllers [1].
Intel
- Documentation page.
- MCS 51 core
- MCS 51/251 - Classic
- 128 byte on-chip data RAM
- 87C51/80C51BH/80C31BH Commercial/Express version
- 80C31BH/80C51BH/87C51 Automotive version
- MCS 51/251 - Expanded RAM
NXP
NXP (ex. Philips Semiconductors) offers a wide range of 8051-compatible controllers: