The document discusses analog low-pass filters and microphones for signal conditioning, comparing sampling rates and aliasing effects between STM and ATMEGA microcontrollers. It notes the STM32 has a 12-bit ADC with an 84 MHz clock that allows sampling above 15 kHz, while the ATMEGA328p has a 10-bit ADC that can only sample up to 15 kHz due to its lower 13 MHz clock and sampling rates of 40-200 kHz.
The document discusses analog low-pass filters and microphones for signal conditioning, comparing sampling rates and aliasing effects between STM and ATMEGA microcontrollers. It notes the STM32 has a 12-bit ADC with an 84 MHz clock that allows sampling above 15 kHz, while the ATMEGA328p has a 10-bit ADC that can only sample up to 15 kHz due to its lower 13 MHz clock and sampling rates of 40-200 kHz.
The document discusses analog low-pass filters and microphones for signal conditioning, comparing sampling rates and aliasing effects between STM and ATMEGA microcontrollers. It notes the STM32 has a 12-bit ADC with an 84 MHz clock that allows sampling above 15 kHz, while the ATMEGA328p has a 10-bit ADC that can only sample up to 15 kHz due to its lower 13 MHz clock and sampling rates of 40-200 kHz.
The document discusses analog low-pass filters and microphones for signal conditioning, comparing sampling rates and aliasing effects between STM and ATMEGA microcontrollers. It notes the STM32 has a 12-bit ADC with an 84 MHz clock that allows sampling above 15 kHz, while the ATMEGA328p has a 10-bit ADC that can only sample up to 15 kHz due to its lower 13 MHz clock and sampling rates of 40-200 kHz.