The TPL5010 presents headline numbers that matter for battery-powered designs: a typical supply range around 1.8–5.5 V, ultra-low standby current near 35 nA, and selectable intervals up to 7200 s. This guide converts technical specs into actionable engineering decisions for IoT and sensor systems.
| Feature | TPL5010 (Nano-Timer) | Standard 555 Timer | MCU Internal Sleep Timer |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quiescent Current | 35 nA (Typ) | ~100-500 µA | ~500 nA - 2 µA |
| Timing Accuracy | ±1% (Factory Trimmed) | Varies with RC components | High (Crystal dependent) |
| PCB Area Impact | Extremely Low (3x3mm) | High (External caps needed) | Zero (Integrated) |
| Watchdog Function | Dedicated Hardware | No | Software Dependent |
The device is a nano-power system timer with watchdog-like behavior intended to periodically wake or reset a host MCU. Common applications are battery-powered sensors, remote data-loggers, and long-life IoT nodes that require extreme quiescent current and reliable periodic wake or fail-safe resets.
By Marcus Chen, Senior Hardware Architect
DONE signal timing. The TPL5010 requires a DONE pulse to acknowledge the wake-up; otherwise, it may assume a system crash and stay in a reset loop.The supply range lets you tie the timer to common rails without extra regulators. User Benefit: At 35 nA, the timer consumes less energy over 10 years than most batteries lose through self-discharge, making it "transparent" to your power budget.
Hand-drawn schematic, not a precise circuit diagram.
The TPL5010 can function as a hardware watchdog. If the host MCU fails to "kick" the timer (via the DONE pin) within the programmed window, the TPL5010 asserts a reset. Critical for: Remote sensors where manual rebooting is impossible.
How do I measure TPL5010 standby current accurately?
Use a source-measure unit (SMU) and long averaging. Ensure no floating input pins are drawing current during the test.
Can it replace an MCU's RTC?
Only if you need periodic wake-ups. It does not provide "Time of Day" (hours/minutes) tracking, only relative intervals.
The TPL5010 is a compact, ultra-low-power timer—supply 1.8–5.5 V, typical standby 35 nA—ideal for duty-cycled IoT systems. To succeed, verify your power budget against real-world MCU wake energy, implement a robust DONE signal firmware pattern, and validate accuracy across your specific operating temperature range.




