Forgot login?   Register
  Subscribe to Defense Tech Briefs  
  • Home
  • News
  • Features
  • Tech Briefs
  • Videos
  • Products
  • Events
  • eZines

ASDX Series of silicon pressure sensors

Tuesday, December 01 2009

Honeywell Sensing and Control, Minneapolis, MN, has introduced the ASDX Series of silicon pressure sensors with pressure ranges of 15, 30, and 100 psi.

The sensors feature an ASICbased design, which provides an amplified condition pressure reading. Calibrated output values for pressure are updated at approximately 1 kHz. The sensors offer output options of ratiometric 12-bit analog or 12-bit I2C or SPI digital; supply voltages of 3.3 or 5.0 Vdc; standard calibrations including inches H2O, cm H2O, psi, mbar, bar, and kPa; and absolute, differential, and gage pressure types. Additional signal conditioning incorporated into the sensors allows users to remove components from their PC board in order to free space. Designed to provide digital correction of sensor offset, sensitivity, temperature coefficients, and non-linearity, the sensors are designed for use with non-corrosive, non-iconic working fluids such as air and dry gases.

For Free Info Visit http://info.hotims.com/22932-120


blog comments powered by DISQUS back to top

Topics

  • Alternative Fuels
  • Biomass
  • Energy Storage
  • Geothermal Power
  • Government Initiatives
  • Energy Efficiency
  • Renewable Energy
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Remediation Technologies
  • Solar Power
  • Wind Power
  • Transportation
  • LEDs/Lighting
  • Batteries
  • Hydrogen
  • Thermoelectrics
  • Hydropower
  • Recycling
  • Carbon Dioxide
  • Energy Harvesting
  • Smart Grid
  • Waste-to-Energy

Most Popular

  1. Paintable Solar Cells
  2. Introducing the First Solar & Wind e-zine
  3. Batteries Made From Ordinary Paper
  4. Process Cleans Wastewater, Generates Electricity, Desalinates Seawater
  5. Bacteria Turns Carbon Dioxide Into Liquid Fuel
  6. New Nano-Material Could Revolutionize Solar Panels and Batteries
  7. Using Plastics to Make Solar Cells More Cost-Effective
  8. New Pathway to Forming Hydrogen Storage Compounds
  9. Generating Hydrogen from Water

Featured Video

A new lab at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is dedicated to improving the quality of light that LEDs produce. Take a look inside the lab in this video.
Read More >>

© 2009-2010 Tech Briefs Media Group

  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertising
  • Privacy
  • Defense Tech Briefs
  • Embedded Technology
  • NASA Tech Briefs