They also have an internal pull-up resistor (disconnected by default) of 100 KOhm. Each pin can provide (source) a current of 3 mA or 15 mA, depending on the pin, or receive (sink) a current of 6 mA or 9 mA, depending on the pin. Each of the 54 digital pins on the Due can be used as an input or output, using pinMode(), digitalWrite(), and digitalRead() functions.To erase, press and hold the Erase button for a few seconds while the board is powered. This will remove the currently loaded sketch from the MCU. It is possible to erase the Flash memory of the SAM3X with the onboard erase button. All the available memory (Flash, RAM and ROM) can be accessed directly as a flat addressing space. The available SRAM is 96 KB in two contiguous bank of 64 KB and 32 KB. The bootloader is preburned in factory from Atmel and is stored in a dedicated ROM memory. The SAM3X has 512 KB (2 blocks of 256 KB) of flash memory for storing code. A properly configured shield can read the IOREF pin voltage and select the appropriate power source or enable voltage translators on the outputs for working with the 5V or 3.3V. This pin on the Arduino board provides the voltage reference with which the microcontroller operates. This regulator also provides the power supply to the SAM3X microcontroller. A 3.3 volt supply generated by the on-board regulator. Supplying voltage via the 5V or 3.3V pins bypasses the regulator, and can damage your board. The board can be supplied with power either from the DC power jack (7 - 12V), the USB connector (5V), or the VIN pin of the board (7-12V). 5V.This pin outputs a regulated 5V from the regulator on the board.
You can supply voltage through this pin, or if supplying voltage via the power jack, access it through this pin.
In the Getting Started section, you can find all the information you need to configure your board, use the Arduino Software (IDE), and start to tinker with coding and electronics. You can find your board warranty information here. An unconnected pin, reserved for future use.This enables shield compatibility with a 3.3V board like the Due and AVR-based boards which operate at 5V. IOREF: allows an attached shield with the proper configuration to adapt to the voltage provided by the board.TWI: SDA and SCL pins that are near to the AREF pin.
The Due is compatible with all Arduino shields that work at 3.3V and are compliant with the 1.0 Arduino pinout. The board contains everything needed to support the microcontroller simply connect it to a computer with a micro-USB cable or power it with a AC-to-DC adapter or battery to get started. Applying voltages higher than 3.3V to any I/O pin could damage the board. The maximum voltage that the I/O pins can tolerate is 3.3V. Warning: Unlike most Arduino boards, the Arduino Due board runs at 3.3V.
It has 54 digital input/output pins (of which 12 can be used as PWM outputs), 12 analog inputs, 4 UARTs (hardware serial ports), a 84 MHz clock, an USB OTG capable connection, 2 DAC (digital to analog), 2 TWI, a power jack, an SPI header, a JTAG header, a reset button and an erase button. It is the first Arduino board based on a 32-bit ARM core microcontroller. The Arduino Due is a microcontroller board based on the Atmel SAM3X8E ARM Cortex-M3 CPU.