industry news
Subscribe Now

Renesas Electronics Enables Flexible Design for Capacitive Touch-Based Human-Machine Interface Applications

Düsseldorf, April 22, 2015 – Renesas Electronics, a premier supplier of advanced semiconductor solutions, today announced its new touch sensing starter kit (part# Y-RX113CAPT01) for the RX113 Group of 32-bit microcontrollers (MCUs), which incorporate capacitive touch sensor intellectual property (IP) that enables high sensitivity, high noise immunity, and excellent water resistance. The new kit offers systems designers greater flexibility in developing human-machine interface (HMI) applications for home appliances, industrial machinery, and others that require touch capability in rugged environments.

The capacitive touch sensor IP built into RX113 Group of MCUs delivers both high sensitivity and high noise tolerance, allowing touch recognition even when the operator is wearing gloves, for instance with industrial applications such as numerical control (NC) machine tool control panels. It also provides excellent water resistance, making it suitable for use in a wide variety of product categories, including electric kitchen appliances that may be exposed to water spills, such as induction heating (IH) cooking devices or dishwashers, or products designed for wet environments, such as remote controls for bath water heaters or water-resistant TV sets.

The new touch sensing development kit enables system designers to take advantage of the full performance benefits offered by Renesas’ capacitive touch sensor IP. In addition, the kit provides automatic tuning functionality that solves a key problem for capacitive touch interface development: the tradeoff between touch sensitivity and noise tolerance. The starter kit is bundled with four touch sensing evaluation boards, making it simple to create suitable environments for testing panel materials, proximity or position sensing, and more. 

The new touch sensing development kit includes:

  • Four touch sensing evaluation boards and sample software for each
  • Workbench6 automatic tuning tool (Note 1), that allows designers to start development immediately, with features including:

o          All-in-one package that accelerates the start of development

o          Evaluation boards and automatic tuning tool that make it easy to set up a touch sensing development environment

o          Ability to output tuning data as source files

Key features of the evaluation boards and automatic tuning tool included in the starter kit:

1) Touch sensing evaluation boards

A) Evaluation board for basic touch sensing operations: keys, key matrix, sliders, and touch wheels

Suitable for sensing applications employing materials such as acrylic, glass, wood, or plastic, covered with fabric, etc.

B) Evaluation board for proximity sensing (non-contact sensing applications): Applications where hygiene is an issue, or where the operator wears thick latex gloves or mittens (Note 2).

C) Evaluation board for trackpads: Applications using position and direction sensing to mimic the functionality of a PC mouse (Note 2)

2) Workbench6 automatic tuning tool

  • Touch sensor tuning data is output as project source files that are compatible with Renesas’ CS+ and e2 studio (Note 3) integrated development environments.
  • Supports the self-capacitance method, which is particularly well suited to applications requiring high sensitivity or proximity detection; the mutual-capacitance method, which provides excellent water resistance and matrix key support using multiple keys; and patterns that mix self-capacitance and mutual-capacitance – an industry first. This makes it possible to build systems that are like conventional touch key panels with proximity sensors added. (Note 4).

Renesas at ESEC

Renesas Electronics will showcase demonstrations featuring the RX113 MCUs at the 18th Embedded Systems Expo (ESEC) to be held at Tokyo Big Sight from May 13-15, 2015, as part of Japan IT Week.

For more information on Renesas’ RX113 Group of 32-bit MCUs, see http://www.renesas.eu/press/news/2014/news20141201.jsp

For more information on Renesas’ capacitive touch sensor IP, see http://www.renesas.eu/products/mpumcu/rx/rx100/rx113/index.jsp

Note 1) Renesas released the Workbench development tool in 2009, timed to coincide with the start of mass production of the R8C/3xT Group of touch sensing MCUs. A variety of functions have been added since then in response to customer requirements. The current version of the software is Workbench6.

Note 2) Only the board is included. Compatible software will be distributed via the website at a later date.

Note 3) An integrated development environment tool for Renesas RX Family (RX600, RX200, and RX100) MCUs that is based on the internationally popular Eclipse open source integrated development environment and the CDT plugin, which enables development using C/C++.

Note 4) Workbench6, which supports mixing self-capacitance and mutual-capacitance, will be distributed via the website at a later date.

Availability

The new touch sensing starter kit will be available at the end of May 2015. (Availability subject to change without notice.)

Refer to the separate sheet for the main specifications of the starter kit.

See more product information

Remarks

All other registered trademarks or trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

About Renesas Electronics Europe

Renesas Electronics is the world’s number one supplier of microcontrollers and a premier supplier of advanced semiconductor solutions, including system-on-chip and a wide range of discrete analogue and power devices. Established in 2010, Renesas Electronics combines the collective semiconductor expertise of Hitachi, Mitsubishi Electric and NEC Electronics, encapsulating more than 200 years’ experience.

Renesas’ products are the result of decades of research and investment into semiconductor technology and customer solutions. Today, they provide pioneering platforms for the advancement of the Smart Society, embedding intelligence, connectivity, safety and security in solutions for cars, homes, buildings and factories. In Europe, Renesas complements its cutting-edge technology with resources that foster customer proximity and span the entire product lifecycle. These include the European Technology Centre, which designs innovative solutions specifically for Europe, and the European Quality Centre in Düsseldorf, which provides technical support to customers throughout the region. Renesas also operates an effective ecosystem, comprising the industry’s largest local support network and an extensive network of over 800 hardware and software alliance partners.

Headquartered in Japan, Renesas Electronics has subsidiaries in 20 countries worldwide. More information is available atwww.renesas.eu.

 

Renesas Electronics Europe on http://twitter.com/Renesas_Europehttp://facebook.com/RenesasEurope and http://youtube.com/RenesasPresents.

Leave a Reply

featured blogs
May 2, 2024
I'm envisioning what one of these pieces would look like on the wall of my office. It would look awesome!...
Apr 30, 2024
Analog IC design engineers need breakthrough technologies & chip design tools to solve modern challenges; learn more from our analog design panel at SNUG 2024.The post Why Analog Design Challenges Need Breakthrough Technologies appeared first on Chip Design....

featured video

Introducing Altera® Agilex 5 FPGAs and SoCs

Sponsored by Intel

Learn about the Altera Agilex 5 FPGA Family for tomorrow’s edge intelligent applications.

To learn more about Agilex 5 visit: Agilex™ 5 FPGA and SoC FPGA Product Overview

featured paper

Altera® FPGAs and SoCs with FPGA AI Suite and OpenVINO™ Toolkit Drive Embedded/Edge AI/Machine Learning Applications

Sponsored by Intel

Describes the emerging use cases of FPGA-based AI inference in edge and custom AI applications, and software and hardware solutions for edge FPGA AI.

Click here to read more

featured chalk talk

Maximizing High Power Density and Efficiency in EV-Charging Applications
Sponsored by Mouser Electronics and Infineon
In this episode of Chalk Talk, Amelia Dalton and Daniel Dalpiaz from Infineon talk about trends in the greater electrical vehicle charging landscape, typical block diagram components, and tradeoffs between discrete devices versus power modules. They also discuss choices between IGBT’s and Silicon Carbide, the advantages of advanced packaging techniques in both power discrete and power module solutions, and how reliability is increasingly important due to demands for more charging cycles per day.
Dec 18, 2023
18,673 views