L9823
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23827431-L9823
Octal Low-Side Driver for bulb, resistive and inductive loads with serial input control, output protection and diagnostic
having leads that are designed to be soldered on the side of a circuit board that the body of the component is mounted on.
The Maximum Operating Temperature is the maximum body temperature at which the thermistor is designed to operate for extended periods of time with acceptable stability of its electrical characteristics.
HTS (Harmonized Tariff Schedule) codes are product classification codes between 8-1 digits. The first six digits are an HS code, and the countries of import assign the subsequent digits to provide additional classification. U.S. HTS codes are 1 digits and are administered by the U.S. International Trade Commission.
Occurring at or forming the end of a series, succession, or the like; closing; concluding.
The center distance from one pole to the next.
a count of all of the component leads (or pins)
An indicator of formal certification of qualifications.
The voltage level by which an electrical system is designated and to which certain operating characteristics of the system are related.
an electronic circuit that converts the voltage of an alternating current (AC) into a direct current (DC) voltage.?
Nominal current is the same as the rated current. It is the current drawn by the motor while delivering rated mechanical output at its shaft.
The rated output current is the maximum load current that a power supply can provide at a specified ambient temperature. A power supply can never provide more current that it's rated output current unless there is a fault, such as short circuit at the load.
the flight time of packets over the transmission link and is limited by the speed of light.
Turn-on delay, td(on), is the time taken to charge the input capacitance of the device before drain current conduction can start.
Supply current refers to the input current to an LDO regulator at no load, which flows inside the IC in order to operate. The power consumption of an LDO regulator can be calculated as. (Input Voltage) x (Consumption current of IC itself) + (Input Voltage - Output Voltage) x (Load current)