XC5VX95T-2FFG1136I

제조업체: 자일링스
로직 셀: 98,304
로직 슬라이스: 15,360
임베디드 RAM(eRAM): 3,072 Kb
패키지: FFG1136 (Flip-Chip BGA)
작동 온도: 산업용(-40°C ~ +100°C)

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    사양

    모델 P/N 시리즈 실험실/CLBS 수 속도 등급 논리 요소/셀 수 총 램 비트 I/O 수 전압 - 공급 마운팅 유형 작동 온도 패키지 / 케이스 공급업체 디바이스 패키지
    XC5VX95T-2FFG1136I Virtex-5 SX 14,72 -2,00 94208 8580000 640 ~1.0 V 표면 실장 -40 °C ~ +100 °C (I) 1136-BBGA / FCBGA 1136-FCBGA

    그리고 XC5VX95T-2FFG1136I is a mid-to-high-end FPGA from the Virtex-5 SXT family (Xilinx, now AMD), built on the reliable 65nm process and tuned specifically for DSP-intensive and high-bandwidth applications that also need solid high-speed serial connectivity.

    Here’s the key stuff engineers usually look at first:

    • ~94,208 logic cells (with 14,720 adaptive logic modules / slices) — solid capacity for complex DSP chains, multi-channel filters, video encoders/decoders, FFTs, or heavy signal-processing pipelines
    • 16 RocketIO GTX transceivers — these deliver dependable multi-gigabit serial performance, commonly supporting up to ~6.5 Gbps in real-world links (great for 10Gb Ethernet, PCIe Gen1/2, Serial RapidIO, or custom high-speed data streams)
    • 640 user I/Os — plenty of flexible pins for interfacing with external DDR2/3 memory, fast ADCs/DACs, sensors, or board-level expansion
    • Embedded block RAM around 8.8 Mbit (plus ~1.5 Mbit distributed RAM for smaller, low-latency buffers and FIFOs)
    • Lots of DSP48E slices (around 488) — second-gen 25×18 multipliers with 48-bit accumulators, optimized for high-throughput fixed- or floating-point math, filters, and arithmetic-heavy tasks
    • 패키지: 1136-pin FFG (flip-chip BGA, ~35 × 35 mm), industrial temperature range (-40°C to +100°C junction)
    • -2 speed grade — gives you strong timing performance and good closure margins while keeping power consumption more reasonable than the fastest -3 bins in many DSP/SerDes-heavy designs

    The SXT series shines when your project is DSP-focused with fast serial I/O — it prioritizes those DSP48E blocks and transceivers over embedded processors (no PowerPC here; that’s FXT territory) or plain logic density (that’s more LX/LXT).