List of NXP products
The following is a partial list of NXP and Freescale Semiconductor products, including products formerly manufactured by Motorola until 2004. NXP and Freescale merged in 2015.[1] MicroprocessorsEarly microprocessors
68000 series
88000 series (RISC)PowerPC and Power ISA processors
ARM coresi.MXARM920 based:
ARM926 based:
ARM11 based:
Cortex-A8 based:
Cortex-A9 based:
Cortex-A7 based:
Cortex-A72 based:
S32ARM Cortex-A53 and/or ARM Cortex-M4 based: Layerscape / QorIQARM Cortex-A7 based:
ARM Cortex-A9 based:
ARM Cortex-A53 based:
ARM Cortex-A72 based:
Microcontrollers6800 series8-bit
16-bit
68000 series
M·CORE-basedThe M·CORE-based RISC microcontrollers are 32 bit processors specifically designed for low-power electronics.[7] M·CORE processors, like 68000 family processors, have a user mode and a supervisor mode, and in user mode both see a 32 bit PC and 16 registers, each 32 bits. The M·CORE instruction set is very different from the 68k instruction set—in particular, M·CORE is a pure load-store machine and all M·CORE instructions are 16 bit, while 68k instructions are a variety of lengths. However, 68k assembly language source code can be mechanically translated to M·CORE assembly language.[8] The M·CORE processor core has been licensed by Atmel for smart cards.[9]
Power-Architecture
ARM11 Application Processor with Modem
ARM Cortex-M coresCortex-M0+ microcontrollers
Cortex-M4 microcontrollers
see also: S32K ARM7 coresARM7TDMI automotive microcontrollers
TPU and ETPU modulesThe Time Processing Unit (TPU) and Enhanced Time Processing Unit (eTPU) are largely autonomous timing peripherals found on some Freescale parts.
Digital signal processorsNote: the 56XXX series is commonly known as the 56000 series, or 56K, and similarly the 96XXX is known as the 96000 series, or 96K. 56000 series
96000 series
StarCore seriesNote: "There is no native support for floating point operations on StarCore"[10]
MEMS Sensors
Reconfigurable compute fabric deviceSoftware
References
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