Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Proteus Design Suite

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Initial release
  
1988 (1988)

Operating system
  
Windows

Stable release
  
8.5

Licence
  
Proprietary

Developer(s)
  
Labcenter Electronics Ltd.

Type
  
Electronic design automation

The Proteus Design Suite is an Electronic Design Automation (EDA) tool including schematic capture, simulation and PCB Layout modules. It is developed in Yorkshire, England by Labcenter Electronics Ltd with offices in North America and several overseas sales channels. The software runs on the Windows operating system and is available in English, French, Spanish and Chinese languages..

Contents

History

The first version of what is now the Proteus Design Suite was called PC-B and was written by the company chairman, John Jameson, for DOS in 1988. Schematic Capture support followed in 1990, with a port to the Windows environment shortly thereafter. Mixed mode SPICE Simulation was first integrated into Proteus in 1996 and microcontroller simulation then arrived in Proteus in 1998. Shape based autorouting was added in 2002 and 2006 saw another major product update with 3D Board Visualisation. More recently, a dedicated IDE for simulation was added in 2011 and MCAD import/export was included in 2015. Feature led product releases are typically biannual, while maintenance based service packs are released as required.

Product Modules

The Proteus Design Suite is a Windows application for schematic capture, simulation, and PCB layout design. It can be purchased in many configurations, depending on the size of designs being produced and the requirements for microcontroller simulation. All PCB Design products include an autorouter and basic mixed mode SPICE simulation capabilities.

Schematic Capture

Schematic capture in the Proteus Design Suite is used for both the simulation of designs and as the design phase of a PCB layout project. It is therefore a core component and is included with all product configurations.

Microcontroller Simulation

The micro-controller simulation in Proteus works by applying either a hex file or a debug file to the microcontroller part on the schematic. It is then co-simulated along with any analog and digital electronics connected to it. This enables it's used in a broad spectrum of project prototyping in areas such as motor control, temperature control and user interface design. It also finds use in the general hobbyist community and, since no hardware is required, is convenient to use as a training or teaching tool. Support is available for co-simulation of:

  • Microchip Technologies PIC10, PIC12, PIC16,PIC18,PIC24,dsPIC33 Microcontrollers.
  • Atmel AVR (and Arduino), 8051 and ARM Cortex-M3 Microcontrollers
  • NXP 8051, ARM7, ARM Cortex-M0 and ARM Cortex-M3 Microcontrollers.
  • Texas Instruments MSP430, PICCOLO DSP and ARM Cortex-M3 Microcontrollers.
  • Parallax Basic Stamp, Freescale HC11, 8086 Microcontrollers.
  • PCB Design

    The PCB Layout module is automatically given connectivity information in the form of a netlist from the schematic capture module. It applies this information, together with the user specified design rules and various design automation tools, to assist with error free board design. Design Rule Checking does not include high speed design constraints. PCB's of up to 16 copper layers can be produced with design size limited by product configuration.

    3D Verification

    The 3D Viewer module allows the board under development to be viewed in 3D together with a semi-transparent height plane that represents the boards enclosure. STEP output can then be used to transfer to mechanical CAD software such as Solidworks or Autodesk for accurate mounting and positioning of the board.

    References

    Proteus Design Suite Wikipedia