Wireless and radio frequency (RF) parts include Integrated Circuits (ICs) that generate, condition, transmit, and receive signals over the air. These components form the backbone of connectivity in consumer, industrial, medical, and automotive designs where reliability and compliance matter. Online Components backs this category with an authorized channel, reliable stock depth, and U.S.-based shipping that keeps projects moving. You'll find clear data, steady availability, and parts that fit real production schedules without drama.
This selection spans RF transceivers, Power Amplifiers (PA), Low-Noise Amplifiers (LNA), mixers, switches, demodulators, synthesizers and Phase-Locked Loops (PLL), front-end modules, baluns, filters, and control ICs. Key specs include frequency range from sub-gigahertz to multi-gigahertz, output power in decibel-milliwatts (dBm), linearity (IP3), sensitivity, noise figure, bandwidth, supply voltage, digital interfaces such as Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) or Inter-Integrated Circuit (I²C), package style, and operating temperature. Engineers can target Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, Industrial, Scientific, and Medical (ISM) bands, cellular, or proprietary links. Purchasers get the breadth they need with the parameters that matter.
Start with band plan and protocol fit. Pick devices that match the region, antenna, modulation scheme, and regulatory limits your product must meet. Next, size the link budget: combine output power, receiver sensitivity, noise figure, and required linearity when blockers and adjacent channels get loud. Then plan integration and layout. Some ICs fold in LNAs, PAs, and switching for speed to market, while others keep functions discrete for finer control, thermal headroom, and power-rail flexibility.
Purchasers, design engineers, test teams, and contract manufacturers shop this category for prototypes, pilot runs, and full builds. Core use cases include smart home devices and wearables, industrial telemetry and predictive maintenance, vehicle telematics and connected modules, medical monitoring and home health, and smart energy metering. You'll also see these parts in asset tracking, retail beacons, gateways, and building automation. From tiny sensors to edge nodes, RF parts keep data moving with repeatable performance.
Online Components maintains U.S.-based inventory with fast shipping that keeps lines running. Every line ships through an authorized path with supplier authentication, preserving quality and traceability. Screen pricing, low minimum order quantity (MOQ) flexibility, and seamless online ordering remove friction for spot buys and scheduled releases. Our responsive customer service team helps with documentation, cross-references, and order support.
Noise figure describes how much an RF receiver adds noise compared with an ideal reference. Lower numbers help sensitivity and link budget, which boosts range and data reliability in busy bands.
A Low-Noise Amplifier (LNA) sits on the receive path to lift weak signals while adding minimal noise. A Power Amplifier (PA) drives the transmit path, delivering output power and linearity so the waveform holds up through filters, switches, and the antenna.
Most devices benefit from matching at the antenna and at key ports to hit target gain, efficiency, and stability. Follow the reference network in the data sheet, keep RF traces short, and treat ground as a first-class component.
A Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) synthesizes stable local oscillators for mixing and channel selection. Clean phase noise and fine step size support tighter adjacent-channel behavior, faster hops, and crisp demodulation.
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