USB Type-C and power delivery 101 - Ports and connections
Gayathri Vasudevan
embedded.com (May 08, 2017)
USB Type-C is the newly introduced and powerful interconnect standard for USB. When paired with the new Power Delivery (PD) specification, Type-C offers enhancements to the existing USB 3.1 interconnect that lower the cost and simplify the implementation of power delivery over USB. From a form factor perspective, the USB Type-C connector combines multiple USB connectors – Micro-B, Type-A, and Type-B – in a reversible connector measuring only 2.4 mm in height (see Figure 1). Type-C allows developers to also combine multiple protocols in a single cable, including DisplayPort, PCIe or Thunderbolt. Bandwidth is double that of USB 3.0, increasing to 10 Gbps with SuperSpeed+ USB3.1. Finally, the USB Type-C connector can deliver up to 100 W. This enables a wider range of applications to operate using USB (see Figure 2). For more details, watch An Introduction to USB Type-C video and Type-C Basics.
In this two part series, we describe power delivery with USB Type-C, starting with ports and connectors in this article, followed by the power delivery protocol in part two.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- Complete USB Type-C Power Delivery IP
- Fully Self-contained Single/Multi Port USB Type-C Power Delivery IP
- USB Type-C and Power Delivery Verification IP
Related White Papers
- USB Type-C and power delivery 101 - Power delivery protocol
- USB Power Delivery 2.0 Enables Power Distribution Flexibility
- Designing AC/DC Adaptors for USB Type-C Power
- Building Multi-Port USB Type-C Adapters for Power
Latest White Papers
- QiMeng: Fully Automated Hardware and Software Design for Processor Chip
- RISC-V source class riscv_asm_program_gen, the brain behind assembly instruction generator
- Concealable physical unclonable functions using vertical NAND flash memory
- Ramping Up Open-Source RISC-V Cores: Assessing the Energy Efficiency of Superscalar, Out-of-Order Execution
- Transition Fixes in 3nm Multi-Voltage SoC Design