XCKU15P-3FFVE1517E 1517-FCBGA (40×40) integrated circuit IC FPGA 512 I/O 1517FCBGA
Product Attributes
TYPE | DESCRIPTION |
Category | Integrated Circuits (ICs)Embedded |
Mfr | AMD Xilinx |
Series | Kintex® UltraScale+™ |
Package | Tray |
Standard Package | 1 |
Product Status | Active |
Number of LABs/CLBs | 65340 |
Number of Logic Elements/Cells | 1143450 |
Total RAM Bits | 82329600 |
Number of I/O | 512 |
Voltage – Supply | 0.873V ~ 0.927V |
Mounting Type | Surface Mount |
Operating Temperature | 0°C ~ 100°C (TJ) |
Package / Case | 1517-BBGA, FCBGA |
Supplier Device Package | 1517-FCBGA (40×40) |
Base Product Number | XCKU15 |
FPGAs are the way to go
Internet control has always been a path to autonomous driving, but in Dan Isaacs’ opinion, a distributed system where every node has computational power and intelligence is the most efficient system, and if all the computation and intelligence are concentrated in a central node or cloud, it’s not a very good solution. And although 5G has great advantages in terms of low latency and bandwidth, it is still inevitably a wireless transmission, so there is bound to be an unreliable side to wireless transmission. We’ve seen many scenarios just now where if you rely on a network in that scenario, it’s still less reliable.
Dan Isaacs said that 5G is like infrastructure or a highway, which must be very helpful for L4 autonomous driving, but is not a panacea to solve or achieve L4 autonomous driving. It can allow some of the problems of autonomous driving to be better solved, for example, traffic light signals still have a certain error rate through vision, and it can give us a very good complement if we go through 5G and Telematics. Programmable logic processors provided by FPGAs will remain the obvious choice for the development of autonomous driving technology for a long time to come.
AMD Extends Life Cycle of All Xilinx 7 Series Devices to at Least 2035
The 28nm AMD Xilinx 7 Series devices continue to be popular, offering world-class technology and leading-edge features to customers in the industrial, automotive, test and measurement, and medical markets. Customers in these market segments demand longer product lifetimes, typically requiring 15-year lifecycles, with many products supporting longer lifecycles.
Extending product lifecycles
With these needs in mind, AMD Xilinx is pleased to officially announce that support for all 7 Series FPGAs and Adaptive SoCs will be extended to at least 2035. This includes our cost-optimized Spartan®-7 and Artix®-7 FPGAs, our entire Zynq®-7000 SoC portfolio, and Kintex®-7 and Virtex®-7 FPGAs. all rates and temperature grades are included.
The 7 series devices are uniquely positioned in the AMD Xilinx portfolio and will remain ideal for new designs for many years to come.
- Spartan-7 FPGAs deliver high performance per unit of power in a small package
- Artix-7 FPGAs deliver high transceiver bandwidth with low power consumption
- Zynq-7000 SoCs combine the software programmability of Arm®-based processors with the hardware programmability of FPGAs