IC (Integrated Circuit) means an assemblage of
electronic components such as resistors, transistors, capacitors, etc. All
these are crammed into a very small chip and attached with each other to
acquire a common objective.
The IC package is what encases the die of
integrated circuit and extends it out into a device we can more conveniently
attach to. Every external connection on the die is linked via a very small
piece of gold wire to a pad or pin on the packaging. The silver, extruding
terminals on an IC are the pins. These pins carry out the work to link to
different components of a circuit. These are of highest significance to us
whereas they are what will go on to connect to the remaining elements and wires
in a circuit.
Every IC is polarized and each is pin is
distinctive in case of both position and operation. For this reason, it is
necessary for the package to have some way to impart which pin is which. For
most ICs, a dot or a notch (in some cases, both or sometimes anyone of them)
designates the first pin. If you can recognize the first pin, the rest of the
pin numbers increase according to the sequence as you move counter-clockwise
around the chip.
The way how the IC packages mount to a circuit
board is one of the primary distinguishable package type characteristics.
Mainly there are two mounting types: through-hole (PTH) or surface-mount (SMD
or SMT). All packages fall into one of these two mounting types. Usually
through-hole packages are bigger in size and much simpler to work with. They are
designed especially to be pierced through one side of a board and dredged to
the other side.
Surface-mount packages can be small to
minuscule in size. They are all intended to be installed on one side of a
circuit board and be dredged to the surface. Most of the times, the pins of a
SMD package thrust out the side. These also steep to the chip, or are sometimes
set out in a matrix on the bottom of the chip. ICs with surface mount packages
are not very suitable to assemble with hands. Generally special tools are
needed to assist in the process.
There are numerous varieties of IC packages,
each of which has distinctive measures, mounting styles, and/or
pin-enumerations. These packages are batched into three major categories: Dual
In-line Packages, Grid Arrays and Chip Carriers. Each package, regardless of
the category has a body style that scales with pin count. The number of pins
determines the physical dimension of the package, the name of the package does
not.
1. Dual In-line Packages [DIP], or Dual In-Line
[DIL] packages are packages with two rows of leads on two sides of the package.
DIP ICs may be through-hole [PDIP or CERDIP] or SMT package [SOJ or SOIC].
2. Quad Flat Packs or Chip Carriers are square
packages [or nearly square], with leads on all four sides Chip Carriers, as in
PLCCs and other variants are strictly Surface Mount Technology (SMT).
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