What is CMOS ?

What is CMOS ? - Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor.


CMOS is short for complementary metal-oxide semiconductor. CMOS is an onboard, battery powered semiconductor chip inside computers that stores information. This information ranges from the system time and date to system hardware settings for your computer. The picture shows an example of the most common CMOS coin cell battery (Panasonic CR 2032 3V) used to power the CMOS memory.


History of CMOS


The Motorola 146818 chip was the first RTC and CMOS RAM chip to be used in early IBM computers, capable of storing a total of 64 bytes of data. Since the system clock used 14 bytes of RAM, this left an additional 50 bytes for storing system settings. Today, most computers have moved the settings from CMOS and integrated them into the southbridge or Super I/O chips.


How long does the CMOS battery last?
The standard lifetime of a CMOS battery is around 10 Years. However, this can vary depending on the use and environment in which the computer resides.

Which devices use CMOS?
  1. Digital logic circuits
  2. SRAM (Static RAM)
  3. Microprocessors
  4. Microcontrollers

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