Features
- Solid-state potentiometer
- Three-wire serial interface
- 100 wiper tap points
- Wiper position stored in nonvolatile memory and recalled on power-up
- 99 resistive elements, log taper
- Temperature compensated
- End to end resistance, 32kΩ ±15%
- Terminal voltages, ±5V
- Low power CMOS
- VCC = 5V
- Active current, 3mA max.
- Standby current, 750µA max.
- High reliability
- Endurance, 100,000 data changes per bit
- Register data retention, 100 years
- Packages
- 8 Ld TSSOP
- 8 Ld SOIC
- 8 Ld PDIP
Description
Support is limited to customers who have already adopted these products.
The Intersil X9C303 is a digitally controlled potentiometer (XDCP). The device consists of a resistor array, wiper switches, a control section, and nonvolatile memory. The wiper position is controlled by a three-wire interface. The resistor array is composed of 99 resistive elements. Between each element and at either end are tap points accessible to the wiper terminal. The position of the wiper element is controlled by the CS, U/D, and INC inputs. The position of the wiper can be stored in nonvolatile memory and then be recalled upon a subsequent power-up operation. The device can be used as a three-terminal potentiometer or as a two-terminal variable resistor in a wide variety of applications ranging from control, to signal processing, to parameter adjustment. Digitally-controlled potentiometers provide three powerful application advantages; (1) the variability and reliability of a solid-state potentiometer, (2) the flexibility of computer-based digital controls, and (3) the use of nonvolatile memory for potentiometer settings retention.
| Part Number | Status | Samples | Stock | Package | Carrier Type | MOQ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| X9C303PIZ | Obsolete | N/A | In Stock | PDIP | Tube | 600 |
| X9C303PZ | Obsolete | N/A | Out of Stock | PDIP | Tube | 800 |
| X9C303S8IZ | Obsolete | N/A | Out of Stock | SOIC | Tube | 800 |
| X9C303S8IZ-2.7 | Obsolete | N/A | Out of Stock | SOIC | Tube | 800 |
| X9C303S8IZT1 | Obsolete | N/A | Out of Stock | SOIC | Reel | 2500 |
| X9C303S8Z | Obsolete | N/A | In Stock | SOIC | Tube | 800 |
| X9C303S8ZT1 | Obsolete | N/A | Out of Stock | SOIC | Reel | 2500 |
| X9C303V8IZ | Obsolete | N/A | In Stock | TSSOP | Tube | 400 |
| X9C303V8IZT1 | Obsolete | N/A | Out of Stock | TSSOP | Reel | 2500 |
| X9C303V8Z | Obsolete | N/A | Out of Stock | TSSOP | Tube | 500 |
| X9C303V8ZT1 | Obsolete | N/A | Out of Stock | TSSOP | Reel | 2500 |
Filters
Applied Filters
- Manual - Development ToolsPDF 2.16 MB AN1555 Sep 17, 2025
- Price Increase NoticePDF 257 KB PIN19006 Mar 01, 2019
- Product Change NoticePDF 237 KB PCN13065 Dec 24, 2013
- Product Change NoticePDF 204 KB PCN13058 Nov 04, 2013
- Product Change NoticePDF 152 KB PCN12085 Nov 07, 2012
- Application NotePDF 281 KB an1425 May 22, 2008AI-generated Summary: Digitally Controlled Potentiometers (DCPs) offer precise resistance control with configurations in both serial and parallel modes, featuring fixed resistors and various resistance options. The ISL22317 model provides 1% precision with 128 taps and can function as a two-terminal variable resistor or three-terminal potentiometer, delivering high accuracy and low temperature coefficient. DCPs can outperform DACs in fine tuning within limited ranges, offering better resolution with fewer bits. Resolution varies with voltage and tap count, as detailed in the provided tables. Usage guidelines and liability disclaimers emphasize proper application and safety considerations.
- Application NotePDF 750 KB an139 Jun 30, 2005AI-generated Summary: The document details the design of power supplies using Intersil’s XDCP mixed signal products. It explains four key circuit schematics: Front End, Power Mesh, Secondary Control, and Primary Control, highlighting their interconnections. The Front End converts AC line power to an unregulated 320V DC, incorporating protection and EMI filtering components. The Power Mesh is a single switch forward DC/DC converter that regulates 320V DC to 12V DC at 10A, using a cascode transistor arrangement and a digitally controlled switching frequency to meet EMI requirements.
- Application NotePDF 534 KB an133 Jun 06, 2005AI-generated Summary: The document explains how digitally controlled potentiometers (XDCPs) enable programmability in amplifier circuits by adjusting cutoff frequency and gain. It details the design of a non-inverting amplifier with variable resistors forming an RC low pass filter and gain control. Techniques to reduce potentiometer resistance for high-frequency applications are described, allowing gain from 1 to 2 and cutoff frequency from 130kHz to over 1MHz. The amplifier’s parameters are controlled via a serial bus, enabling computer-based customization.
- Application NotePDF 467 KB an1149 May 03, 2005AI-generated Summary: The document details circuits using Intersil digitally controlled potentiometers (X9C103, X9312) combined with op amps (LT1226, OP37, LT1028) for applications like null adjustment, amplifier biasing, and proportional-integral temperature control. It explains modes controlled by NADJ/ADJ signals, automatic nulling via feedback loops, and bias stabilization in high-output buffer amplifiers. The circuits optimize gain, bandwidth, noise, and minimize distortion and power consumption. It also covers clocking options for nulling and temperature control using digital potentiometers and comparators.
- Application NotePDF 324 KB an124 Apr 27, 2005AI-generated Summary: Digitally-controlled potentiometers have key analog parameters including number of taps (16 to 256), end-to-end resistance (1kΩ to 1MΩ), wiper resistance (~40Ω), wiper current (1-3mA), power rating (10-50mW), resolution, noise, linearity, and temperature coefficients. Voltage limits range from ±5V to ±15V on pins. Absolute linearity ensures accuracy within one least significant bit, while relative linearity guarantees tap-to-tap accuracy within 0.2 LSB. Temperature coefficients affect resistance stability. Various circuit techniques exist to mitigate these limitations. The document also includes usage notices, quality grades, and liability disclaimers from Renesas Electronics.
Recommended Documents (1)
Datasheets (1)
- Manual - Development ToolsPDF 2.16 MB AN1555 Sep 17, 2025
Manuals & Guides (1)
- Application NotePDF 281 KB an1425 May 22, 2008AI-generated Summary: Digitally Controlled Potentiometers (DCPs) offer precise resistance control with configurations in both serial and parallel modes, featuring fixed resistors and various resistance options. The ISL22317 model provides 1% precision with 128 taps and can function as a two-terminal variable resistor or three-terminal potentiometer, delivering high accuracy and low temperature coefficient. DCPs can outperform DACs in fine tuning within limited ranges, offering better resolution with fewer bits. Resolution varies with voltage and tap count, as detailed in the provided tables. Usage guidelines and liability disclaimers emphasize proper application and safety considerations.
- Application NotePDF 750 KB an139 Jun 30, 2005AI-generated Summary: The document details the design of power supplies using Intersil’s XDCP mixed signal products. It explains four key circuit schematics: Front End, Power Mesh, Secondary Control, and Primary Control, highlighting their interconnections. The Front End converts AC line power to an unregulated 320V DC, incorporating protection and EMI filtering components. The Power Mesh is a single switch forward DC/DC converter that regulates 320V DC to 12V DC at 10A, using a cascode transistor arrangement and a digitally controlled switching frequency to meet EMI requirements.
- Application NotePDF 534 KB an133 Jun 06, 2005AI-generated Summary: The document explains how digitally controlled potentiometers (XDCPs) enable programmability in amplifier circuits by adjusting cutoff frequency and gain. It details the design of a non-inverting amplifier with variable resistors forming an RC low pass filter and gain control. Techniques to reduce potentiometer resistance for high-frequency applications are described, allowing gain from 1 to 2 and cutoff frequency from 130kHz to over 1MHz. The amplifier’s parameters are controlled via a serial bus, enabling computer-based customization.
- Application NotePDF 467 KB an1149 May 03, 2005AI-generated Summary: The document details circuits using Intersil digitally controlled potentiometers (X9C103, X9312) combined with op amps (LT1226, OP37, LT1028) for applications like null adjustment, amplifier biasing, and proportional-integral temperature control. It explains modes controlled by NADJ/ADJ signals, automatic nulling via feedback loops, and bias stabilization in high-output buffer amplifiers. The circuits optimize gain, bandwidth, noise, and minimize distortion and power consumption. It also covers clocking options for nulling and temperature control using digital potentiometers and comparators.
- Application NotePDF 324 KB an124 Apr 27, 2005AI-generated Summary: Digitally-controlled potentiometers have key analog parameters including number of taps (16 to 256), end-to-end resistance (1kΩ to 1MΩ), wiper resistance (~40Ω), wiper current (1-3mA), power rating (10-50mW), resolution, noise, linearity, and temperature coefficients. Voltage limits range from ±5V to ±15V on pins. Absolute linearity ensures accuracy within one least significant bit, while relative linearity guarantees tap-to-tap accuracy within 0.2 LSB. Temperature coefficients affect resistance stability. Various circuit techniques exist to mitigate these limitations. The document also includes usage notices, quality grades, and liability disclaimers from Renesas Electronics.View More (11)
Application Notes & White Papers (11)
- Price Increase NoticePDF 257 KB PIN19006 Mar 01, 2019
Product Notices (PCN, EOL, etc) (8)
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