Microchip announces FPGA Functional Safety Certification Packages

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Systems used in many high-reliability commercial applications require certification to the IEC 61508 Safety Integrity Level (SIL) 3 functional safety specification.

In a move intended to reduce the cost of this process and accelerate time to market for system developers Microchip Technology, which certifies its products and tools to industry safety specifications, has now added IEC 61508 SIL 3 certification packages for two more of its System-on-Chip (SoC) FPGA and FPGA families.

“Microchip FPGA families have a broad and historically strong position within the industrial market and are recognised for the high reliability and security of our non-volatile FPGA technologies,” said Bruce Weyer, corporate vice president of Microchip’s FPGA business unit. “We also have a long history of certifying our products and tools to IEC 61508 SIL 3 and other safety specifications so the end-equipment certification process for our customers is much easier.

“Adding these packages for our low-power-consumption SmartFusion 2 SoC FPGAs and IGLOO 2 FPGAs is a natural extension for industrial customers who design high-reliability products for the smart grid, automation controllers, process analysers and other safety-critical applications.” 

Microchip’s safety packages are built on top of the SEU-immune, Flash-based FPGA fabric of the SmartFusion 2 and IGLOO 2 devices, and these FPGAs have been certified by independent safety assessor TÜV Rhineland.

Package deliverables include certification of Microchip’s Libero SoC Design Suite v11.8 Service Pack 4 and associated development tools, plus 28 Intellectual Property (IP) cores, safety manuals, documentation and device data sheets. A safety certificate from TÜV Rhineland is also provided.

Microchip also looks to protect customers’ long-term certification investments through practicing customer-driven obsolescence where it commits to build devices used in a certified system as long as customers want to order, and Microchip is able to obtain all sub-elements of a device.

Unlike Static Random Access Memory (SRAM)-based FPGAs, Microchip’s Flash-based SmartFusion 2 and IGLOO 2 FPGAs have eliminated the need for Triple Module Redundancy (TMR) mitigation that increases total system costs.

The SmartFusion 2 SoC FPGA is the only device to integrate an FPGA fabric, Arm Cortex-M3 processor and programmable analogue circuitry. The low-density IGLOO 2 device consumes up to 50 percent less power than similar devices and is intended for general-purpose functions requiring more resources than alternative FPGAs can deliver.