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Monday 18 November 2013

Arduino due

Overview
The Due is Arduino's first ARM-based Arduino development board. This board is based on a powerful 32bit CortexM3 ARM microcontroller made programmable through the familiar Arduino IDE.

The Arduino Due has 54 digital input/output pins (of which 12 can be used as PWM outputs), 12 analog inputs, 4 UARTs (hardware serial ports), an 84 MHz clock, a USB-OTG capable connection, 2 DAC (digital to analog), 2 TWI, a power jack, an SPI header, a JTAG header, a reset button and an erase button. There are also some cool features like DACs, Audio, DMA , an experimental multi tasking library and more.

The board contains everything needed to support the microcontroller; simply connect it to a computer with  a micro-USB cable or power it with a AC-to-DC adapter or battery to get started. The Due is compatible  with all Arduino shields that work at 3.3V and are compliant with the 1.0 Arduino pinout.

Arduino Due
Features:
  • Microcontroller:AT91SAM3X8E
  • Operating Voltage: 3.3V
  • Input Voltage (recommended): 7-12V
  • Digital I/O Pins: 54 (of which 12 provide PWM output)
  • Analog Input Pins: 12
  • Analog Outputs Pins :2 (DAC)
  • Flash Memory: 512 KB all available for the user applications
  • SRAM :96 KB (two banks: 64KB and 32KB)
  • Clock Speed:84 MHz
Note: Unlike other Arduino boards, the Arduino Due board runs at 3.3V. The maximum voltage that the I/O pins can tolerate is 3.3V. Providing higher voltages, like 5V to an I/O pin could damage the board.
For Code & Description Click Here