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Mouser adds power management resource centre for engineers

Mouser adds power management resource centre for engineers

Business news |
By Brian Tristam Williams



Mouser Electronics has rolled out a new online hub it calls a power management resource centre, bringing together application notes, explainers and product pointers aimed at engineers building more efficient designs.

What’s in the power management resource centre

According to Mouser, the power management resource centre is organised around practical design themes rather than a single product family. The company highlights topics such as DC microgrids, energy harvesting and chip-level techniques for sequencing and optimisation, with a mix of articles, blogs and eBooks curated with its manufacturing partners. You can find the landing page via Mouser’s new portal.

The hub also leans into systems-level electrification trends, including battery energy storage systems (BESS), and positions these as areas where engineers increasingly need cross-disciplinary context (power conversion, control, protection and integration) as well as the parts list.

Example parts and kits highlighted by Mouser

As part of the launch, Mouser points to a handful of representative devices and evaluation hardware currently stocked through its catalogue, including an ambient energy manager battery charger IC, a PMIC with multiple buck regulators and LDO rails, an energy-harvesting explorer kit, and a synchronous step-down converter rated up to 4 A output. (These examples are also summarised in Automation.com’s coverage.)

Part of a wider “resource centre” push

This isn’t Mouser’s first themed content site. Over the past few years it has been expanding its set of application-focused microsites, pairing editorial-style explainers with curated component selections. eeNews Europe has previously covered this approach in other domains, such as its automotive resource centre.

For Mouser, the bet seems straightforward: as power architectures get more complex (multi-rail embedded platforms, tight efficiency targets, more battery-centric products), engineers want a single starting point that combines design context with parts that are actually available. The company is pitching this power management resource centre as that starting point.

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