Product category: Programmable Logic Devices
News Release from: Actel Europe | Subject: Antifuse-Based FPGAs BAe
Edited by the Electronicstalk Editorial Team on 4 November 2004
Antifuse-Based FPGAs Provide Secure Solution
Actel'sAxcelerator field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) have been selected by BAE Systems as part of BAE Systems' Archerfish naval mine disposal system
BAE Systems, an international company engaged in the development, delivery and support of advanced defense and aerospace systems in the air, on land, at sea and in space, will use the antifuse-based AX250 device as a tamper-proof, radiation-resistant solution within the safety and arming system of the Archerfish naval system.
This article was originally published on Electronicstalk on 4 November 2004 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
Programmable systems have power to spare
Design combines Fusion Programmable System Chip with CoreABC microcontroller to provide a complete system management solution using a fraction of the Fusion part's logic tiles
FPGA to acquire Martian weather data
Radiation-tolerant one-million-gate FPGA forms part of the meteorological station onboard NASA's recently launched Phoenix mission to Mars
"We needed a highly reliable programmable logic device that could be used in the fusing subsystem of Archerfish," said Doug Green, senior design engineer at BAE Systems.
"For obvious reasons this is a safety-critical application.
Actel's devices offered us a nonvolatile, one-time-programmable solution at a significantly lower cost than the ASIC alternative.
In addition, we wanted the flexibility offered by an FPGA and wanted to eliminate the lengthy fabrication delays associated with ASICs."
The Archerfish system is designed to be deployed from helicopter or ship.
Further reading
Italian distributor expands market
Melchioni will handle Actel's FPGAs and programmable system chips in key consumer, automotive, telecomms and industrial accounts in Italy
Space qualified FPGAs cut power consumption
The low-power radiation-tolerant RTAX-SL FPGA family is specifically targeted at high-reliability space-flight designs
Smart design software for faster FPGAs
Integrated FPGA design environment gains new design entry capability that enables users to design at a higher level of abstraction, speeding time to market
The launch platform lowers a pod, which releases a small and highly maneuverable, one-shot mine disposal vehicle containing a warhead.
The vehicle is guided via sonar and remote camera to seek out all types of sea mines.
When a mine is located, the weapon is detonated, safely destroying the mine.
The Axcelerator AX250 device is used in the serial communications link between the pod and the weapon itself, which is carried over a fiber optic cable.
As part of the final portion of the firing chain, it is vital that these communications are carried out safely and securely.
Saloni Howard-Sarin, director antifuse and tools marketing at Actel, said, "Our antifuse devices deliver flexibility and fast turnaround, while providing a tamper-proof and radiation-tolerant solution that is often required by security and defense applications.
This design win with BAE Systems for the Archerfish is further evidence of Actel's position as a leading provider of FPGA solutions for mission critical applications."
This project received invaluable support from Acal Plc, Actel's UK distributor, through its longstanding relationship with BAE Systems.
About the Axcelerator Device Family Built upon the company's AX architecture, the antifuse-based Axcelerator family delivers better than 500 MHz internal operation and up to 100 percent resource utilisation.
Additionally, the company's live at power-up, single-chip Axcelerator FPGAs avoid in-rush current spikes, simplify system power supply design and generally offer lower standby and dynamic power consumption than competing solutions.
The devices offer levels of design security beyond SRAM-based offerings and conventional ASIC solutions, enabling designers to safeguard against common security problems, including overbuilding, cloning, reverse engineering and denial of service.
Firm errors, which occur when high-energy neutrons generated in the upper atmosphere strike the configuration cells of SRAM-based FPGAs, can be impossible to prevent.
Because the antifuse configuration cannot be altered once programmed, firm errors in Axcelerator FPGAs are nonexistent.
About Actel Actel Corporation is a supplier of innovative programmable logic solutions, including field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) based on antifuse and flash technologies, high-performance intellectual property (IP) cores, software development tools and design services, targeted for the high-speed communications, application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) replacement and radiation-tolerant markets. Request a free brochure from Actel Europe....
• Actel Europe: contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Electronicstalk email newsletter
• NEW
• Electronicstalk Home Page
Related Business News
Uarts Meet Eia/tia-485 Specifications.
Operating from single 3-5.5 V supply at data rates up to 8 Mbps, series XR19L402/400 single/dual-channel 8-bit UARTs with integrated RS-485 transceiver work in active, partial sleep, full sleep, and power-save modes.
Cut FPGA power usage
Designers should consider BOM, cost, power board size and time-to-market when creating a new design. Hezi Saar gives tips and tricks about the factors in selecting an FPGA to implement the design.
Taiwan stocks end down in biggest...
...drop in over 1 yr. Taipei, July 27 (Reuters) - Taiwan shares fell 4.22 percent on Friday to their lowest close in three weeks, marking their largest one-day percentage drop in more than a year, after a sell-off on Wall Street hurt big exporters such as TSMC .
Nippon Oil Aug refining seen flat, eyes Sudan crude
Tokyo, July 27 (Reuters) - Japan's top oil refiner Nippon Oil Corp. will keep its August processing volumes steady versus a year ago to meet summer gasoline demand and is seeking more Nile Blend crude to meet higher utility use.
Fluor Gains Eastman Chemical Gasification Plant Feed Work
Fluor Corporation announced today that it was selected by Eastman Chemical Company to provide front-end engineering and design work for a $1.6 billion gasification project along the Texas Gulf Coast.
Search the Pro-Talk network of sites