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Thursday, September 20, 2018

Freescale Unveils i.MX 7 Series with Industry's Most Power ...
src: mms.businesswire.com

The i.MX range is a family of Freescale Semiconductor (now part of NXP) proprietary microcontrollers for multimedia applications based on the ARM architecture and focused on low-power consumption. The i.MX application processors are SoCs (System-on-Chip), that integrate many processing units into one die, like the main CPU, a video processing unit and a graphics processing unit for instance. The i.MX products are qualified for automotive, industrial and consumer markets. Most of them are guaranteed for a production lifetime of 10 to 15 years.
Many devices use i.MX processors, such as Ford Sync, Kobo eReader, Amazon Kindle, Zune (except for Zune HD), Sony Reader, Onyx Boox readers/tablets, SolidRun SOM's (including CuBox), some Logitech Harmony remote controls and Squeezebox radio, some Toshiba Gigabeat mp4 players. The i.MX range was previously known as the "DragonBall MX" family, the fifth generation of DragonBall microcontrollers. i.MX originally stood for "innovative Multimedia eXtension".

The i.MX solutions consist of hardware (processors and development boards) and software optimized for the processor.


Video I.MX



i.MX 1 series

Launched in 2001/2002, the i.MX1x series is based on the ARM920T architecture.

  • i.MX1 = 200 MHz ARM920T
  • i.MXS = 100 MHz ARM920T
  • i.MXL = 150-200 MHz ARM920T

Maps I.MX



i.MX 2 series

The i.MX2x series is a family of processors based on the ARM9 architecture (ARM926EJ-S), designed in CMOS 90 nm process.

i.MX 21 family

The i.MX21 family is designed for low power handheld devices. It was launched in 2003.

  • i.MX21 = 266 MHz ARM9 platform + CIF VPU (decode/encode) + security
  • i.MX21S = 266 MHz ARM9 platform + security

i.MX 27 family

The i.MX27 family is designed for videotelephony and video surveillance. It was launched in 2007.

  • i.MX27 = 400 MHz ARM9 platform + D1 VPU (decode/encode) + IPU + security
  • i.MX27L = 400 MHz ARM9 platform + IPU + security

i.MX 25 family

The i.MX25 family was launched in 2009. It especially integrates key security features in hardware. The high-end member of the family, i.MX258, integrates a 400 MHz ARM9 CPU platform + LCDC (LCD controller) + security block and supports mDDR-SDRAM at 133 MHz.

  • i.MX258 (industrial) = 400 MHz ARM9 platform + LCDC (with touch screen support) + security
  • i.MX257 (consumer/industrial) = 400 MHz ARM9 platform + LCDC (with touch screen support)
  • i.MX253 (consumer/industrial) = 400 MHz ARM9 platform + LCDC + security (no touch)
  • i.MX255 (automotive) = 400 MHz ARM9 platform + LCDC (with touch screen support) + security
  • i.MX251 (automotive) = 400 MHz ARM9 platform + security

i.MX 23 family

The i.MX233 processor (formerly known as SigmaTel STMP3780 of the STMP37xx family), launched in 2009, integrates a Power Management Unit (PMU) and a stereo audio codec within the silicon. This unique integration removes the need for external power management chip and audio codec chip.

  • i.MX233 (consumer) = 454 MHz ARM9 platform + LCD Controller (with touch screen support) + Pixel Pipeline + security + Power Management Unit + audio codec. Provided in 128LQFP or 169 BGA packages.

i.MX 28 family

The i.MX28 family was launched in 2010. It especially integrates key security features in hardware, an ADC and the power management unit. It supports mDDR, LV-DDR2, DDR2-SDRAM at 200 MHz.

  • i.MX287 (industrial) = 454 MHz ARM9 platform + LCDC (with touch screen support) + security + power management + dual CAN interface + dual Ethernet + L2 Switch
  • i.MX286 (industrial) = 454 MHz ARM9 platform + LCDC (with touch screen support) + security + power management + dual CAN interface + single Ethernet
  • i.MX285 (automotive) = 454 MHz ARM9 platform + LCDC (with touch screen support) + security + power management + dual CAN interface
  • i.MX283 (consumer/industrial) = 454 MHz ARM9 platform + LCDC (with touch screen support) + security + power management + single Ethernet
  • i.MX281 (automotive) = 454 MHz ARM9 platform + security + power management + dual CAN interface + single Ethernet
  • i.MX280 (consumer/industrial) = 454 MHz ARM9 platform + security + power management + single Ethernet

i.MX 7Dual SABRE Board|NXP
src: www.nxp.com


i.MX 3 series

The i.MX3x series is a family of processors based on the ARM11 architecture (ARM1136JF-S mainly), designed in CMOS 90 nm process.

i.MX 31 family

The i.MX31 was launched in 2005. It integrates a 532 MHz ARM1136 CPU platform (with vector floating point unit, L1 caches and 128KB L2 caches) + Video Processing Unit (VPU) + 3D GPU (OpenGL ES 1.1) + IPU + security block. It supports mDDR-SDRAM at 133 MHz.

  • i.MX31 (consumer/industrial/automotive) = 532 MHz ARM1136 platform + VPU + 3D GPU + IPU + security
  • i.MX31L (consumer/industrial/automotive) = 532 MHz ARM1136 platform + VPU + IPU + security

i.MX 37 family

The i.MX37 processor is designed for Portable Media Players. It was launched in 2008.

  • i.MX 37 (consumer) = 532 MHz ARM1176 CPU platform + D1 VPU (multiformat D1 decode) + IPU + security block

It supports mDDR-SDRAM at 133 MHz.

i.MX 35 family

The i.MX35 family is the replacement of i.MX31. It was launched in 2009. The high-end member of the family, i.MX357, integrates a 532 MHz ARM1136 CPU platform (with Vector Floating Point unit, L1 caches and 128KB L2 cache) + 2.5D GPU (OpenVG 1.1) + IPU + security block. It supports DDR2-SDRAM at 133 MHz.

  • i.MX357 (consumer/industrial) = 532 MHz ARM1136 CPU platform + 2.5D GPU + IPU + security
  • i.MX353 (consumer/industrial) = 532 MHz ARM1136 CPU platform + IPU + security
  • i.MX356 (automotive) = 532 MHz ARM1136 CPU platform + 2.5D GPU + IPU + security
  • i.MX355 (automotive) = 532 MHz ARM1136 CPU platform + IPU + security
  • i.MX351 (automotive) = i.MX355 with no LCD interface

i.MX RT1050 MCU/Applications Crossover Processor | Arm® Cortex®-M7 ...
src: cache.nxp.com


i.MX 5 series

The i.MX5x series is based on the ARM Cortex A8 core. It comprises two families: the i.MX51 family (high-end multimedia devices like smartbook or automotive infotainment) and the i.MX50 family (eReaders). It is designed in CMOS 65 nm process. Some models have an Imageon z460 GPU.

i.MX 51 family

The high-end member of the family, i.MX515, integrates an 800 MHz ARM Cortex A8 CPU platform (with NEON co-processor, Vector Floating Point Unit, L1 caches and 256KB L2 cache) + multi-format HD 720p decode / D1 encode hardware video codecs (VPU, Video Processing Unit) + Imageon 3D GPU (OpenGL ES 2.0) + 2.5D GPU (OpenVG 1.1) + IPU + security block. It especially supports DDR2 SDRAM at 200 MHz. The imx51 family was launched in 2009.

  • i.MX515 (consumer/industrial) = 800 MHz ARM Cortex A8 platform (600 MHz for industrial) + HD VPU + 3D GPU + 2.5D GPU + IPU + security
  • i.MX513 (consumer/industrial) = 800 MHz ARM Cortex A8 platform (600 MHz for industrial) + HD VPU + IPU
  • i.MX512 (consumer/industrial) = 800 MHz ARM Cortex A8 platform (600 MHz for industrial) + IPU
  • i.MX516 (automotive) = 600 MHz ARM Cortex A8 platform + HD VPU + 3D GPU + 2.5D GPU + IPU + security block
  • i.MX514 (automotive) = 600 MHz ARM Cortex A8 platform + 3D GPU + 2.5D GPU + IPU + security block

i.MX 50 family

The i.MX508 processor is the result of Freescale collaboration with E Ink. It is dedicated for eReaders. Launched in 2010, it integrates the E Ink display controller within the silicon to save both BOM cost and space on the PCB. It especially supports LP-DDR2 SDRAM at 400 MHz.

  • i.MX508 (consumer) = 800 MHz ARM Cortex A8 platform + 2.5D GPU + Pixel Pipeline + E Ink display controller.

i.MX 53 family

i.MX535 was announced in June 2010. Shipped since the first quarter of 2011.

  • i.MX537 (industrial) = 800 MHz ARM Cortex A8 platform + Full HD VPU (1080p decode) + 3D GPU + 2.5D GPU + IPU + security + IEEE1588
  • i.MX535 (consumer) = 1 GHz ARM Cortex A8 platform + Full HD VPU (1080p decode) + 3D GPU + 2.5D GPU + IPU + security
  • i.MX536 (automotive) = 800 MHz ARM Cortex A8 platform + Full HD VPU (1080p decode) + 3D GPU + 2.5D GPU + IPU + security
  • i.MX534 (automotive) = 800 MHz ARM Cortex A8 platform + 3D GPU + 2.5D GPU + IPU + security

i.MX 6ULZ Applications Processor|NXP
src: www.nxp.com


i.MX 6 series

The i.MX 6 series are based on the ARM Cortex A9 solo, dual or quad cores and typically comes with one or more Vivante GPUs. It is designed in CMOS 40 nm process. i.MX 6 Solo, Dual and Quad were announced in January 2011, during Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

  • "Plus" versions with 1.2 GHz are currently only available via special request to NXP.
  • Vivante GC2000 achieves ~19 GFLOPS for a 594 MHz shader clock and ~23 GFLOPS for a 720 MHz shader clock.

i.MX RT1050 MCU/Applications Crossover Processor | Arm® Cortex®-M7 ...
src: cache.nxp.com


i.MX 7 series

The i.MX 7 series is based on the low-power ARM Cortex A7 CPU core with a secondary ARM Cortex M4 real-time co-processor. It is designed 28 nm fully depleted silicon-on-insulator (FDSOI) process. So far only low-powered single and dual-core models, designed for IoT applications have been released. i.MX 7Solo and i.MX 7Dual were announced in September 2013.


i.MX RT1050 Evaluation Kit|NXP
src: www.nxp.com


i.MX 8 series

The i.MX 8 series was announced in September 2013. The i.MX 8 is based on CPU cores using the ARMv8-A 64-bit CPU architecture. NXP have written that the i.MX 8 series is designed for Driver Information Systems (car computers) and applications have been released.

In May 2016 the i.MX 8 became available as a multisensory enablement kit (MEK) based on i.MX 8. Slides from NXP FTF found on the web indicated an initial total of 5 variants (with a main level of categorization into "Dual" and "Quad") with varying the CPU and GPU capabilities. The CPU was suggested to include varying counts of Cortex-A72, Cortex-A53 and Cortex-M4, while the GPU is either 1 or 2 units of the Vivante GC7000VX. Other publications supported this general image, some even including photos of an evaluation kit that is named "Multisensory Enablement Kit" (MEK) that got later promoted as a development support product by NXP.

The i.MX 8 was announced Q1 2017, based around 3 products. All products include four Cortex-A53 and two Cortex-M4F CPU cores. The more powerful 'QuadPlus' and 'QuadMax' versions includes an additional one or two Cortex-A72 CPU cores, respectively. All i.MX 8 SoCs include two Vivante GC7000 Series GPUs, with the lower end products using GC7000Lite cores, while the 'QuadMax' includes two full GC7000 GPUs.

Standard Key Features: Advanced Security, Ethernet with AVB, USB 3.0 with PHY, MMC/SDIO, UART, SPI, I²C, I²S, Timers, Secure RTC, Media Processor Engine (Neon(TM)), Integrated Power Management.

*pre-production

i.MX 8

Main features

  • Fast multi-OS platform deployment via advanced full-chip hardware virtualization and domain protection
  • Deploy rich, fully independent graphics content across 4x HD screens or 1x 4K screen
  • Ensure all displays are always-on via SafeAssure® Fail-over capable Display Controllers
  • Incorporate Vision and Speech Recognition interactivity via a powerful vision pipeline and audio processing subsystem
  • Rapidly deploy multiple products by utilizing pin & power compatible packages and software friendly copy-exact IP blocks
  • Android(TM)*, Linux®*, FreeRTOS, QNX(TM)*, Green Hills®, Dornerworks* XEN(TM)*
  • Automotive AEC-Q100 Grade 3 (-40° to 125 °C Tj), Industrial (-40° to 105 °C Tj), Consumer (-20° to 105 °C Tj)
  • Fully supported on NXP's 10 and 15-year Longevity Program

i.MX 8M

The i.MX 8M series were announced on January 4 at CES 2017. Main features:

  • Up to four 1.5 GHz ARM Cortex-A53 processors
  • Cortex-M4F for real-time processing
  • LPDDR4, DDR4 and DDR3(L) memory support
  • Two USB 3.0 interfaces with PHY and Type-C support
  • Two PCIe interfaces (1-lane each) with L1 substates for fast wakeup and low power
  • HDMI 2.0a and MIPI-DSI (4-lane) display interfaces o Up to two MIPI-CSI2 (4-lane) camera interfaces
  • Gigabit Ethernet MAC with Audio Video Bridging (AVB) and EEE capability
  • 4K UltraHD resolution and 10-bit High Dynamic Range (HDR) in H.264, H.265 and VP9 support
  • Up to 4Kp60 resolution on the HDMI 2.0a output and 1080p60 resolution on the MIPI-DSI (4-lanes) interface
  • OpenGL ES 3.1, OpenCL 1.2, OpenGL 3.0, OpenVG and Vulkan support

i.MX 8M Mini

The i.MX 8M Mini is NXP's first embedded multi-core heterogeneous applications processors built using advanced 14LPC FinFET process technology. The i.MX 8M Mini family of processors brings together high-performance computing, power efficiency, enhanced system reliability and embedded security needed to drive the growth of fast-growing edge node computing, streaming multimedia, and machine learning applications.

At the heart is a scalable core complex of up to four Arm Cortex-A53 cores running up to 2 GHz plus Cortex-M4 based real-time processing domain at 400+MHz. i.MX 8M Mini core options are optimized for low-power but offer the breadth of processing power necessary for consumer, audio, industrial, machine learning training and inferencing across a range of cloud providers. The i.MX 8M Mini also packs-in hardware 1080p video acceleration to enable two-way video applications, 2D and 3D graphics to provide a rich visual HMI experience, and advanced audio capabilities to enable audio-rich applications. An extensive selection of high-speed interfaces enabling broader system connectivity, and targeting industrial level qualification, the i.MX 8M Mini family may be used in any general embedded consumer and industrial application.

Features

  • Heterogeneous Multi-core Processing Architecture
  • Quad-core Arm Cortex-A53 core up to 2 GHz
  • Cortex-M4 at speeds of 400+MHz
  • 1080p video encode and decode
  • 2D and 3D graphics
  • Display and camera interfaces
  • Multi-channel audio and digital microphone inputs
  • Connectivity (I2C, SAI, UART, SPI, SDIO, USB, PCIe, Gigabit Ethernet)
  • Low-power and standard DDR memory support
  • Multiple pin-compatible product offerings
  • Consumer and Industrial

i.MX 8X

The i.MX 8X series were announced on March 14, 2017. Main features:

  • Up to four (4) 1.2 GHz Cortex-A35 processors
  • Cortex-M4F for real-time processing
  • Latest cryptography standards (AES, flashless SHE, elliptical curve cryptography, key storage)
  • ECC memory and Industrial Safety Integrity Level 3 (SIL 3) certification
  • Tensilica HiFi 4 DSP for audio pre- and post- processing, key word detection and speech recognition
  • 28 nm FD-SOI process

Freescale's popular i.MX6 SoC sprouts a Cortex-M4 MCU
src: linuxgizmos.com


Related series

For the automotive market a very similar series currently using ARM Cortex-A53 and/or ARM Cortex-M4 cores got presented in mid-2015 using the prefix S32.


ROHM's Highly Integrated PMIC Optimized for NXP Semiconductors' i ...
src: meltwater-apps-production.s3.amazonaws.com


Software support

Freescale proposes a layered approach of software with selection of software components optimized for its chips. The i.MX board support packages (BSP), common across all i.MX nodes, consists of kernel optimization, hardware drivers and unit tests. The company also provides a portfolio of multimedia Codecs (ARM and Video processing unit accelerated). The i.MX solution also includes middleware with reuse of open source frameworks like multimedia framework plugins, power management, security/DRM or graphics (OpenGL/OpenVG).

All software solutions for i.MX are publicly available on the company website.

Linux

Freescale i.MX development kits include a Linux software stack with a GNOME Mobile environment.

On the i.MX51 family, the reference user interface is Ubuntu. The last Ubuntu version supported is 10.04.1 (still available on mirrors). Ubuntu dropped the "official" i.MX51 family support since version 10.10. Since Ubuntu 11.10 support for the i.MX53 Quickstart board is available as a preinstalled desktop or server SD card.

The OpenEmbedded Linux distribution supports several i.MX platforms.

Commercial Linux support is available from companies like Lanedo, TimeSys, MontaVista, Wind River Systems and Mentor Graphics.

FreeBSD

Support for the Freescale i.MX51 was added to FreeBSD on 2013-03-20. Support for other members of the i.MX5 family has been added since.

Support for the Freescale i.MX 6 family was added to FreeBSD on 2013-10-31.

NetBSD

NetBSD 6.0 comes with support for the Freescale i.MX51. In version 7.0, support for i.MX 6 based boards was added.

OpenBSD

Support for the FreeScale's i.MX 6 series SoC was added to OpenBSD's head on the 2013-09-06.

Windows CE

Freescale i.MX development kits include WinCE.

Android

In February 2010, Freescale launched an Android platform for the i.MX5x family.

Chromium

In early 2010 Freescale demoed Chromium OS running on the i.MX515 processor. The company has not disclosed any further plans about Chromium or Chrome.

Real-time OS

Freescale has a range of partners providing real-time operating systems and software solutions running on the i.MX processors, such as Trinity Convergence, Adeneo, Thundersoft, Intrinsyc, Wind River Systems, QNX, Green Hills and Mentor Graphics.


i.MX 6Quad SABRE Development Board|NXP
src: www.nxp.com


Reference designs

In January 2010, Freescale announced the first platform of its Smart Application Blueprint for Rapid Engineering (SABRE) series. It is a smartbook (tablet form factor with 7" touch screen resistive), running on i.MX515.

In February 2010, Freescale demoed the SABRE platform for eReaders, based on i.MX515.

Many more reference boards are mentioned and supported through the Freescale i.MX community website. These include:

  • i.MX23EVK
  • i.MX25PDK
  • i.MX28EVK
  • MX37PDK
  • i.MX35PDK
  • i.MX51EVK
  • i.MX53QSB (LOCO)

Freescale's popular i.MX6 SoC sprouts a Cortex-M4 MCU
src: linuxgizmos.com


See also

  • List of Freescale Microcontrollers
  • eBook reader
  • Automotive infotainment
  • Chumby
  • Device tree
  • Smartbook
  • UDOO

i.MX RT1020 Evaluation Kit|NXP
src: www.nxp.com


References


i.MX 8MQuad Evaluation Kit - NXP Semiconductors | Mouser
src: www.mouser.com


External links

  • i.MX Applications processor - Product page
  • Freescale i.MX community website
  • Freescale Public GIT - Linux Kernel and U-Boot.
  • Chips&Media's video codec technology used in Freescale's i.MX 6 series

Source of article : Wikipedia