SoC delivers next generation Wi-Fi performance for IoT applications

22-12-2025 | Mouser Electronics | Semiconductors

Mouser Electronics, Inc. now offers the new MM8108 Wi-Fi HaLow SoC from Morse Micro. The SoC is a HaLow-compliant connectivity solution tailored to meet the needs of IoT and M2M applications.

The SoC is a highly integrated, ultra-low-power, single-chip Wi-Fi solution offering improved performance in all key areas, including range, throughput, and power efficiency, while also reducing the cost, effort, and time required to bring the next generation of Wi-Fi HaLow-enabled products to market. Wi-Fi HaLow is the first Wi-Fi standard tailored to meet the needs of IoT applications, and the SoC delivers over-the-air data rates up to 43.33Mbps at 8MHz bandwidth in worldwide sub-GHz license-exempt bands, with next-generation upgrades boasting 16x better efficiency than standard Wi-Fi. The SoC adds an integrated high-efficiency power amplifier (PA) and high-linearity LNA that meet the IEEE 802.11ah standard, while integrating full MAC and PHY implementations. The SoC's RF interface can also be configured with an external PCB-mount PA or FEM for ultra-long-reach applications with leading Wi-Fi HaLow security features (WPA3, SAE, GCMP) to ensure link-layer communications start and remain protected.

The company also stocks several evaluation kits for the MM8108 SoC. The Morse Micro MM8108-EKH01-01 kits offer a prototyping platform based on the Raspberry Pi 4B. These fully enclosed kits provide out-of-the-box Wi-Fi HaLow connectivity for low-power, long-range wireless IoT applications. The MM8108-EKH05-01 evaluation kit is a fully integrated development platform for a wide range of IoT applications featuring an MM8108 SoC, an STM32U585 low-power MCU, and a BlueNRG-M2 Bluetooth SoC. The MM8108-EKH19 kit features a USB 2.0 network adapter reference design based on the MM8108 SoC, an SMA Wi-Fi HaLow antenna, and a GL-MT3000 router.

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By Nigel Seymour

Nigel has worked in the advertising and magazine publishing industry for many years prior to helping publish articles in the early years of Electropages. He has worked with technical agencies producing documents and artwork for the web over the last few years. He has been products editor for Electropages for over five years.