Texas Instruments
Texas Instruments is a semiconductor manufacturer that designs and supplies analog and embedded processing components used across industrial, automotive, communications, and enterprise electronic systems.
- Analog semiconductors for power management, signal chain, and interface functions in electronic systems.
- Embedded processing products, including microcontrollers and processors, for control, connectivity, and real-time computation.
- Semiconductor solutions for automotive electronics, including advanced driver assistance, powertrain, infotainment, and body electronics.
- Industrial and infrastructure-focused IC portfolios for factory automation, grid infrastructure, communications equipment, and test and measurement.
- Support tools, reference designs, and development ecosystems for hardware and software integration around its analog and embedded products.
More About Texas Instruments
Texas Instruments focuses on analog and embedded processing semiconductors that System Integration Testing (SIT) at the core of many enterprise, industrial, and automotive electronic architectures. Its analog portfolio (analog and mixed-signal ICs) covers power management, signal conditioning, data conversion, interface, and clocking components that connect sensors, actuators, and processors in distributed systems. These devices are used in power supplies, motor drives, sensor modules, communications front-ends, and many subsystems that feed data into digital control platforms.
In embedded processing, Texas Instruments provides microcontrollers and processors (embedded computing) used for deterministic control, digital signal processing, and application-specific workloads. These devices support common embedded interfaces and protocols such as Stateful Packet Inspection (SPI), I²C, UART, CAN, Ethernet, and various industrial fieldbus and automotive communication standards, enabling integration into existing control networks and in-vehicle architectures. Many devices target functional domains such as motor control, power conversion, industrial communication, and human–machine interface.
For industrial environments, Texas Instruments offers ICs that fit into PLCs, distributed control systems, industrial drives, robotics, building automation, and grid and power infrastructure. Products address isolation, current and voltage sensing, precision data acquisition, and robust communication under electromagnetic and thermal constraints common in factories and utilities. In communications and enterprise infrastructure, its analog front-ends, clock and timing devices, power solutions, and high-speed interface components support routers, base stations, optical modules, and data center equipment.
In automotive, Texas Instruments supplies components used in advanced driver assistance systems, powertrain control, body electronics, power inverters, and infotainment platforms. Devices support automotive-grade requirements, including AEC-Q qualification, extended temperature ranges, and functional safety capabilities aligned with ISO 26262 in many product lines. This positions the company within categories such as automotive power electronics, in-vehicle networking, and sensing signal chains.
Across these domains, Texas Instruments complements its hardware with development boards, reference designs, simulation tools, and software kits that help engineers prototype and validate system architectures. This ecosystem supports categories such as power management design, signal chain design, and embedded software development. In enterprise and institutional procurement contexts, Texas Instruments is typically classified under analog ICs, microcontrollers and processors (embedded), power management ICs, interface and connectivity ICs, and automotive and industrial semiconductor solutions.