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AKM Semiconductor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
AKM Semiconductor, Inc.
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryElectrical engineering
Headquarters
ProductsSemiconductors
ParentAsahi Kasei Microdevices
Websitewww.akm.com

AKM Semiconductor, Inc. (AKMS) is a semiconductor manufacturer headquartered in San Jose, California. It is subsidiary of Asahi Kasei Microdevices (AKM) based in Tokyo, Japan.

AKM Semiconductor, Inc. was founded under AKM, which is one of the core operating groups under the umbrella company, Asahi Kasei Corporation electronics business group (Tokyo Stock Exchange (3407.T). AKMS comprises the devices and electronic materials sector of the AKM group.

Products

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Tri-axis Electronic Magnetometer, inside Motorola Xoom.
Size: 4.0 mm × 4.0 mm × 0.75 mm
96 kHz / 24B it DAC inside Nikon D80.
Size: 7.8 mm × 7.6 mm × 1.25 mm

AKMS manufactures mixed-signal IC's and devices utilized in video processing, mobile communications, and optical networking for the consumer, personal communications, and automotive markets.[1]

Some applications of AKM's chips are as components in DVD players, digital mixers, digital audio workstations, and other digital audio applications.[2] Their products include codecs, audio DACs, low-power audio for portable devices, ADCs, DVD-Audio, stereo and multichannel sound, DSD, and S/PDIF transmitters and receivers.[3]

Product Categories
  • Audio Products
  • Video Products
  • Electronic Compass
  • Mobile Communication Products[4]

Incidents

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On 20 October 2020, a fire broke out at the company's Nobeoka semiconductor fabrication plant, lasting 3 days and impacting the high-end audio industry.[5]

References

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  1. ^ "Private Company Information". BusinessWeek. Bloomberg. Archived from the original on July 3, 2009.
  2. ^ Willis, Barry (Oct 10, 1999). "New DAC Chips from AKM Semiconductor Push Audio Performance Envelope". stereophile.com. Interlink Media.
  3. ^ "AES Sustaining Member: AKM Semiconductor, Inc". Audio Engineering Society.
  4. ^ AKM Semiconductor Official website
  5. ^ Young, Clive (29 October 2020). "AKM Factory Fire—A Pro-Audio Industry Disaster". Pro Sound News. Future plc.
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