I am working on some extremely small designs where the entire board is less than 15mm2. There are a surprising amount of very small ICs but I’ve found it’s really tricky to actually do a thorough part search for tiny (sub 2mm x 2mm) parts.

Some vendors have CSP packages that are relatively huge while having other package types like X2SON which are actually smaller. What was called ‘tiny’ and ‘smallest’ a few years ago is actually pretty large by today’s parts.

Any tips on how to find parts?

  • ch00f@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    I mean, some parts can only be so small. 0.4mm bga is about as small as things practically get. Is there a specific functionality that you’re looking for?

    And if it helps, I’ve done tear downs of pacemakers before where minimizing volume is obviously super crucial. They all use custom silicon.

    • FruitfullyYours@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Really small microcontrollers is one category. There’s the ATTiny20 and PSOC4000 ones but what else is hiding out there? DC-DC boosts is another - I’ve found a few that are sub 1x1 but it would be good to be sure I’ve found everything in that size category to help make an educated decision on what to use.

      Searching Digikey by package area isn’t easy. Some vendors have the option but it isn’t universal.

      Basically, I’m trying to figure out if there’s a better approach to finding these parts across vendors.

      • ch00f@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Honestly, in that scenario, I usually just select all the footprints I don’t recognize in the part selector on Digikey and browse through the images. There’s usually only a few pages to go through if you’ve specified everything else well enough.

        Also, if you have the means, I remember seeing a demo from TI(?) where they could bond raw silicon in an inner layer of a PCB. So like, buck converter or whatever inside the board and passives immediately above/below it.

        Oh, and on that note, I think they sell some BGA parts that are basically just that. Here’s an example: https://www.ti.com/product/TPS826716 The controller is inside the little PCB with the passives sitting on top.