The NXP LPC1830FBD144,551 is a 32-bit ARM Cortex-M3 microcontroller from the LPC18xx series, clocked at 180 MHz with 200K x 8 of on-chip SRAM. It is a ROMless device — there is no internal Flash or OTP memory — so program storage must come from an external serial or parallel memory via the EBI/EMI interface. This part targets industrial control, motor drive, and communication gateway applications where the design already carries external Flash or a bootloader in an SPI NOR device.
180 MHz Cortex-M3 — what the speed buys you
The 180 MHz core clock puts this MCU in the performance tier for real-time control loops and protocol stacks. At that frequency, the Cortex-M3 can execute a single-cycle multiply or a hardware divide in a few nanoseconds, which matters for closed-loop motor current regulation or FFT-based vibration analysis. The 200K x 8 SRAM is enough for two 1 KB Ethernet frames plus a modest RTOS heap, but not for frame buffers or large lookup tables — those go off-chip via the EBI.
Industrial temperature grade — where it runs
Rated for -40°C to 85°C ambient, this part operates in factory automation enclosures and outdoor telecom cabinets.
