PCA8574AN Product Information|NXP

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PCA8574AN,112

No Longer Manufactured

12NC: 935283492112

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Operating Features

ParameterValue
Max Sink Current per bit (mA)
25
Max Sink Current, per package (mA)
200
Source Current per bit (mA)
0.1
ParameterValue
I2C-bus (kHz)
400
Operating Temperature (°C)
-40~85
No of Addresses
8

Environmental

Part/12NCPbFreeEU RoHSHalogen FreeRHF IndicatorREACH SVHCWeight (mg)
PCA8574AN,112(935283492112)
Yes
Yes
No
GREACH SVHC
959.0

Quality

Part/12NCSafe Assure Functional Safety
PCA8574AN,112
(935283492112)
-

Shipping

Part/12NCHarmonized Tariff (US)Disclaimer
PCA8574AN,112
(935283492112)
854239

Discontinued and Replacement Part Data

Part/12NCDiscontinuance NoticeLast Time Buy DateLast Time Delivery Date
PCA8574AN,112
(935283492112)
-
2002-12-31
2003-06-30

More about PCA8574AN

Archived content is no longer updated and is made available for historical reference only.

The PCA8574/74A provides general-purpose remote I/O expansion via the two-wire bidirectional I²C‑bus (serial clock (SCL), serial data (SDA)).

The devices consist of eight quasi-bidirectional ports, 400 kHz I²C‑bus interface, three hardware address inputs and interrupt output operating between 2.3 V and 5.5 V. The quasi-bidirectional port can be independently assigned as an input to monitor interrupt status or keypads, or as an output to activate indicator devices such as LEDs. The system controller can read from the input port or write to the output port through a single register.

The low current consumption of 4.5 μA (typical, static) is great for mobile applications and the latched output ports have 25 mA high current sink drive capability for directly driving LEDs.

The PCA8574 and PCA8574A are identical, except for the different fixed portion of the target address. The three hardware address pins allow eight of each device to be on the same I²C‑bus, so there can be up to 16 of these I/O expanders PCA8574/74A together on the same I²C‑bus, supporting up to 128 I/Os (for example, 128 LEDs).

The active LOW open-drain interrupt output (INT) can be connected to the interrupt logic of the microcontroller and is activated when any input state differs from its corresponding input port register state. It is used to indicate to the microcontroller that an input state has changed and the device needs to be interrogated without the microcontroller continuously polling the input register via the I²C‑bus.

The internal Power-On Reset (POR) initializes the I/Os as inputs with a weak internal pull-up 100 μA current source.

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