One-Chip Radar Ready for Traffic Monitoring, Mining, and Logistics

March 21, 2023
The sensor provides the full capability of NXP’s third-generation 28-nm RFCMOS, long-range detection—2 to 300 meters worth of detection range—plus elevation sensing.

Check out more of our CES 2023 coverage. This video is also part of the TechXchange: Automotive Radar.

Advanced driving-assistance systems (ADAS) often employ radar. On that front, NXP's SAF85xx RFCMOS automotive, solid-state radar family supports these types of applications, including those for self-driving cars (see figure). The system-on-chip (SoC), which utilizes frequency-modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) technology, can handle 76- to 81-GHz frequencies for automotive radar. I talked with Matthias Feulner, NXP's Senior Director for ADAS, about solid-state radar and NXP's offering (see video above)

The SAF85xx includes a radar transceiver integrated into a compute engine that includes Arm Cortex-A53 and Arm Cortex-M7 cores. The transceiver incorporates four transmitters and four receivers along with the ADC support, phase rotator, low-phase-noise VCO, SPT radar accelerator, and BBE32 Vector DSP. The family is ISO 26262-compliant and suitable for ASIL Level B applications. It's designed to meet SHE+, EVITA Full security requirements through its HSE security engine.

Links

About the Author

William G. Wong | Senior Content Director - Electronic Design and Microwaves & RF

I am Editor of Electronic Design focusing on embedded, software, and systems. As Senior Content Director, I also manage Microwaves & RF and I work with a great team of editors to provide engineers, programmers, developers and technical managers with interesting and useful articles and videos on a regular basis. Check out our free newsletters to see the latest content.

You can send press releases for new products for possible coverage on the website. I am also interested in receiving contributed articles for publishing on our website. Use our template and send to me along with a signed release form. 

Check out my blog, AltEmbedded on Electronic Design, as well as his latest articles on this site that are listed below. 

You can visit my social media via these links:

I earned a Bachelor of Electrical Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology and a Masters in Computer Science from Rutgers University. I still do a bit of programming using everything from C and C++ to Rust and Ada/SPARK. I do a bit of PHP programming for Drupal websites. I have posted a few Drupal modules.  

I still get a hand on software and electronic hardware. Some of this can be found on our Kit Close-Up video series. You can also see me on many of our TechXchange Talk videos. I am interested in a range of projects from robotics to artificial intelligence. 

Sponsored Recommendations

Comments

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Electronic Design, create an account today!