Dual in-line package (known as DIP or DIL)
is one of the most common among many kinds of IC packages with distinguishable measures,
mounting styles, and/or pin-enumerations. In terms of microelectronics, a
package of electronic components which has two parallel lines of electrical
connecting pins and cased in a rectangular housing is known as dual in-line
package. It can be either inserted in a socket or through-hole ascended to a
printed circuit board. In 1964, Don Forbes, Bryant Rogers and Rex Rice invented
the dual-inline ordination at Fairchild Research & Development. It was
during that period, when the limited number of leads obtainable on circular
transistor-style packages became a restriction in the application of integrated
circuits. Additional signal and power supply leads are needed by the more and
more complex circuits (according to the Rent’s rule); in the end,
microprocessors and analogous complicated devices needed leads to a greater
extent than could be put on a DIP package, which leads to the development of
highly dense packages. Moreover, rectangular & square packages made it
effortless to route printed-circuit traces underneath the packages.
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Saturday, January 23, 2016
Dual in-Line Package for Integrated Circuits
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