Difference between revisions of "MISC-TN-027 — Qualifying a product for industrial, harsh environments: resilience against power supply anomalies"

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==Introduction==
 
==Introduction==
Over the decades, DAVE Embedded Systems has been sharpening a tight qualification process for the products to cope with the challenging requirements of industrial applications operating in harsh environments on one hand and the ever-increasing complexity of the system-on-chips powering these products themselves.
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Over the decades, DAVE Embedded Systems has been sharpening a tight qualification process for the products the company has been commissioned to design and manufacture. On one hand, this process is engineered to cope with the challenging requirements of industrial applications operating in harsh environments. On the other hand, it tackles the ever-increasing complexity of system-on-chips powering these products themselves.
  
The qualification process comprises several tests. One of these tests is specifically designed verify the resilience of DUT's power supply unit (PSU) to supply voltage anomalies, which are pretty common in industrial environments.
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The qualification process comprises several tests with different characteristics and goals. One of these tests is specifically designed for verifying the resilience of DUT's power supply unit (PSU) to supply voltage anomalies, which are pretty common in industrial environments. This Technical Note (TN for short) describes how we run this test.
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== Test description ==
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TBD

Revision as of 14:56, 24 July 2023

Info Box


History[edit | edit source]

Version Date Notes
1.0.0 July 2023 First public release

Introduction[edit | edit source]

Over the decades, DAVE Embedded Systems has been sharpening a tight qualification process for the products the company has been commissioned to design and manufacture. On one hand, this process is engineered to cope with the challenging requirements of industrial applications operating in harsh environments. On the other hand, it tackles the ever-increasing complexity of system-on-chips powering these products themselves.

The qualification process comprises several tests with different characteristics and goals. One of these tests is specifically designed for verifying the resilience of DUT's power supply unit (PSU) to supply voltage anomalies, which are pretty common in industrial environments. This Technical Note (TN for short) describes how we run this test.

Test description[edit | edit source]

TBD