Zenode.ai Logo
Beta
K
NUCLEO-F334R8 - STMICROELECTRONICS NUCLEO-F070RB

NUCLEO-F334R8

Active
STMicroelectronics

STM32 NUCLEO-64 DEVELOPMENT BOARD WITH STM32F334R8 MCU, SUPPORTS ARDUINO AND ST MORPHO CONNECTIVITY

Deep-Dive with AI

Search across all available documentation for this part.

NUCLEO-F334R8 - STMICROELECTRONICS NUCLEO-F070RB

NUCLEO-F334R8

Active
STMicroelectronics

STM32 NUCLEO-64 DEVELOPMENT BOARD WITH STM32F334R8 MCU, SUPPORTS ARDUINO AND ST MORPHO CONNECTIVITY

Technical Specifications

Parameters and characteristics for this part

SpecificationNUCLEO-F334R8
Board TypeEvaluation Platform
ContentsBoard(s)
Core ProcessorARM® Cortex®-M4
Interconnect SystemST Morpho, Arduino R3 Shield
Mounting TypeFixed
PlatformNucleo-64
Suggested Programming EnvironmentSTM32Cube, Keil MDK, IAR EW
TypeMCU 32-Bit
Utilized IC / PartSTM32F334

Pricing

Prices provided here are for design reference only. For realtime values and availability, please visit the distributors directly

DistributorPackageQuantity$
DigikeyBulk 1$ 10.99
NewarkEach 1$ 11.44

Description

General part information

NUCLEO-F334R8 Series

The STM32F334x4/6/8 family incorporates the high-performance Arm®Cortex®-M4 32-bit RISC core operating at up to 72 MHz frequency embedding a floating point unit (FPU), high-speed embedded memories (up to 64 Kbytes of Flash memory, up to 12 Kbytes of SRAM), and an extensive range of enhanced I/Os and peripherals connected to two APB buses.

The STM32F334x4/6/8 microcontrollers offer two fast 12-bit ADCs (5 Msps), up to three ultra-fast comparators, an operational amplifier, three DAC channels, a low-power RTC, one high-resolution timer, one general-purpose 32-bit timer, one timer dedicated to motor control, and four general-purpose 16-bit timers. They also feature standard and advanced communication interfaces: one I2C, one SPI, up to three USARTs and one CAN.

The STM32F334x4/6/8 family operates in the –40 to +85 °C and –40 to +105 °C temperature ranges from 2.0 to 3.6 V power supply. A comprehensive set of power-saving modes allow the design of low-power applications.