Microchip dsPIC33A Brings Security to Digital Control



Uploaded image Microchip has expanded its dsPIC33A digital signal controller family with the dsPIC33AK256MPS306, a new device aimed at digital power, complex motor control, and intelligent sensing designs. The launch brings together fast real-time control, dense analog integration, and hardware security features in one part, which makes it easier to place in designs that now need more than loop control alone. AI data center power, industrial equipment, and automotive systems are all part of the target picture here.

The dsPIC33AK256MPS306 is a 32-bit digital signal controller used for power conversion, motor control, and sensing applications. In a server power supply, for example, it can sit inside the control path for DC/DC conversion while also handling telemetry, firmware integrity, and communications. That gives the family a broader role than older control-focused devices that needed more external support around them.

High-Speed Control With Dense Analog Integration

At the core of the family is a 200 MHz 32-bit architecture with a double-precision floating point unit. Around that, Microchip has integrated 78 ps PWM resolution, multiple 40 MSPS 12-bit ADCs, 5 ns high-speed comparators, and DACs with slope compensation. Those details matter most in high-frequency power designs, especially where SiC and GaN switching devices push loop timing and analog response much harder than older silicon stages.

That mix also helps in more ordinary digital power designs where reducing external analog support still matters. If more of the sensing, control, and timing chain is already inside the controller, the board gets easier to route and the bill of materials can come down. That is one of the clearer practical points in this release.

Security Features Move Closer To The Control Loop

One of the more notable parts of this launch is the security support. Microchip says the family includes hardware features for secure boot, secure firmware update, and secure debug, along with library support for post-quantum cryptographic algorithms aligned with CNSA Suite 2.0 recommendations. The company also points to hardware-accelerated cryptographic functions for Open Compute Project power supplies and other connected real-time control designs. That makes the device easier to place in systems where the controller is no longer isolated from broader platform security requirements. In modern server hardware, firmware updates and trusted control behavior are not side issues. They sit much closer to the power and management architecture than they used to.

Communications And Motor Feedback Are Built In

Microchip has also loaded the family with interface support that fits both rack-level and machine-level designs. I3C is included for low-latency telemetry and sensor networking, alongside CAN FD, LIN, SPI, I2C, and SENT. That gives the device a wider path into connected power shelves, industrial control nodes, and embedded sensing platforms without needing extra interface devices too early in the design.

Motor control remains a major part of the story as well. Microchip lists 20 ns sine and cosine execution for field-oriented control, plus support for BiSS-C, EnDat, quadrature and optical encoders, and resolvers. That puts the dsPIC33AK256MPS306 family in a strong position for servo drives and other motion systems where accurate position feedback and fast loop response both matter.

Development Support Extends Beyond The Device

The broader ecosystem is also worth noting because Microchip is not presenting this as a part that stands alone. Support includes MPLAB X, MPLAB Code Configurator, the MPLAB Machine Learning Development Suite, and Zephyr RTOS support. FreeRTOS, SafeRTOS, wolfCrypt libraries, MICROSAR IO, and Lauterbach TRACE32 tools are also part of the supported environment.

For prototyping, Microchip is offering several hardware options, including motor control DIMs and a general-purpose DIM for the dsPIC33 Curiosity platform. The picture here is fairly clear. This is a control device family built to cover digital power, motion, sensing, connectivity, and security in one place, which is exactly where a lot of embedded control designs are heading.

Learn more and read the original announcement at www.microchip.com

Technology Overview

The dsPIC33AK256MPS306 is a 200 MHz 32-bit digital signal controller for digital power conversion, motor control, and intelligent sensing applications. It integrates 78 ps PWM resolution, multiple 40 MSPS 12-bit ADCs, 5 ns comparators, DACs, communications interfaces, and hardware security support including post-quantum cryptography libraries.

View the dsPIC33AK256MPS306 datasheet.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the dsPIC33AK256MPS306 used for?

It is used for digital power, motor control, and intelligent sensing applications that need deterministic real-time control and dense analog integration.

Does the dsPIC33AK256MPS306 support post-quantum cryptography?

Yes. Microchip says the family includes library support for post-quantum cryptographic algorithms aligned with CNSA Suite 2.0 recommendations.

Which communication interfaces are included?

Microchip lists I3C, CAN FD, LIN, SPI, I2C, and SENT.


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Microchip Technology is a leading provider of microcontrollers, analog semiconductors, FPGAs, and embedded solutions for a wide range of industries.

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