Home > Electronics Engineer Magazine > Power Supply
PC shipments rise to 69.9m units
Intel adds momentum; AMD makes long-term gains in Q1 microprocessor market, according to iSuppli Corp
US IPTV subscribers nearly quadruple in 2007
But Internet Protocol Television is not stealing customers from satellite television in the Americas region – at least for now, according to survey
Touch screens are display touchstones
Touch screens have the Midas touch for growth, spurring a flood of competition, technologies and OEM interest
RFID in 2008: where is the action?
Predictions of a $5.29 billion RFID market in 2008, up 7.3 per cent on the $4.93 billion in 2007
Exploring quasi-resonant converters for power supplies
Jon Harper looks at how equipment makers can bring the efficiency advantages and lower EMI of quasi-resonant power conversion to lower power systems
LED backlights to take over Notebook PCs
Nintey per cent of large-sized LCD notebook-PC panels shipped in 2012 will employ LEDs to backlight their displays
Sensing IC has low power mode

Quantum Research Group, the charge-transfer (QT) capacitive touch company, has developed an 8-key touch sensor IC, the QT1080-ISG, that consumes just 40ľA at 3V in low power mode.

Designed primarily for use in mobile phones, MP3 players, PC peripherals, remote controls and similar consumer devices, it enables eight touch keys through almost any panel material to facilitate a great variety of designs.
Other features include fully debounced results, lifetime automatic calibration, adjacent key suppression, low noise operation and a fast detection mode for use in applications where a simple touch slider is needed. When used to implement individual touch keys, the sensitivity of each channel can be independently tuned simply by changing a capacitor.
Capacitive touch sensors have been notoriously prone to drift and unreliable operation. The QT1080-ISG charge-transfer chip provides automatic drift compensation over-the life of the device to suppress false detections caused by changes in temperature, humidity or other environmental effects.
The device also self-calibrates on power-up and automatically recalibrates after long detections so that keys never 'freeze' due to foreign objects in contact with the sensing surface or other unwanted influences.
Adjacent Key Suppression (AKS) is an included patent-pending feature that prevents multiple keys from responding to a single touch. It works by comparing signal strengths within a group of keys and suppressing detections from those keys with signals which are weaker than the dominant, intended key.

For more information, visit www.qprox.com