A sensor is a device that measures physical input from its environment and converts it into data that can be interpreted by either a human or a machine. Most sensors are electronic (the data is converted into electronic data), but some are more simple, such as a glass thermometer, which presents visual data.

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CURRENT SENSOR ACS578

374.99

Top Features

  • Industry-leading noise performance through proprietary amplifier and filter design techniques
  • Integrated shield greatly reduces capacitive coupling from current conductor to die due to high dV/dt signals, and prevents offset drift in high-side, high-voltage applications
  • Total output error improvement through gain and offset trim over temperature
  • Small package size, with easy mounting capability
  • Monolithic Hall IC for high reliability
  • Ultralow power loss: 100 µΩ internal conductor resistance
  • Galvanic isolation allows use in economical, high-side current sensing in high-voltage systems
  • AEC-Q100 qualified
  • 3.0 to 5.5 V, single supply operation
  • 120 kHz typical bandwidth
  • 3 µs output rise time in response to step input current
  • Output voltage proportional to AC or DC currents
  • Factory-trimmed for accuracy
  • Extremely stable output offset voltage
  • Nearly zero magnetic hysteresis

CURRENT SENSOR WCS1600

275.49

Extra Information

Brand:
Winson
Supply Current:
3.5~6.0 mA
Operating Temp:
-20~125C
Supply Voltage:
3.0~12 V
Sensitivity:
22mV/A
Bandwidth:
23kHz
Conductor Through Hole:
9.0mm2
Temperature Drift:
+/-0.3 mV/C
Zero Current Vout:
2.5V