HSIO Single-Ended I/O Standards Specifications
HSIO Single-Ended SSTL, HSTL, HSUL, POD, and LVSTL I/O Reference Voltage Specifications
HSIO Single-Ended SSTL, HSTL, HSUL, and POD I/O Standards Signal Specifications
HSIO Single-Ended LVSTL I/O Standards Specifications
HSIO Differential SSTL, HSTL, and HSUL I/O Standards Specifications
HSIO Differential POD I/O Standards Specifications
HSIO Differential LVSTL I/O Standards Specifications
HSIO Differential I/O Standards Specifications
MIPI D-PHY I/O Standards Specifications
HPS Clock Performance
HPS Internal Oscillator Frequency
HPS PLL Specifications
HPS Cold Reset
HPS SPI Timing Characteristics
HPS SD/eMMC Timing Characteristics
HPS USB 2.0 Timing Characteristics
HPS USB 3.1 Timing Characteristics
HPS Ethernet Media Access Controller (EMAC) Timing Characteristics
HPS I2C Timing Characteristics
HPS I3C Timing Characteristics
HPS NAND Timing Characteristics
HPS Trace Timing Characteristics
HPS GPIO Interface
HPS JTAG Timing Characteristics
HPS Programmable I/O Timing Characteristics
Supply Current and Power Consumption
Intel offers two ways to estimate power for your design—the Intel FPGA Power and Thermal Calculator (PTC) and the Intel Quartus® Prime Power Analyzer feature.
Use the PTC before you start your design to estimate the supply current for your design. The PTC provides a magnitude estimate of the device power because these currents vary greatly with the usage of the resources.
The Intel Quartus® Prime Power Analyzer provides better quality estimates based on the specifics of the design after you complete place-and-route. The Power Analyzer can apply a combination of user-entered, simulation-derived, and estimated signal activities that, when combined with detailed circuit models, yield very accurate power estimates.