Passive Components Blog
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • NewsFilter
    • All
    • Aerospace & Defence
    • Antenna
    • Applications
    • Automotive
    • Capacitors
    • Circuit Protection Devices
    • electro-mechanical news
    • Filters
    • Fuses
    • Inductors
    • Industrial
    • Integrated Passives
    • inter-connect news
    • Market & Supply Chain
    • Market Insights
    • Medical
    • Modelling and Simulation
    • New Materials & Supply
    • New Technologies
    • Non-linear Passives
    • Oscillators
    • Passive Sensors News
    • Resistors
    • RF & Microwave
    • Telecommunication
    • Weekly Digest

    Samsung Introduced Low ESL 3-Terminal Reverse-Geometry MLCCs for High-Performance ADAS

    Würth Elektronik Presents New Bidirectional Digital Isolators

    Using Stress–Strain Curves to Diagnose Tantalum Powders for Capacitors

    Coilcraft Introduces SMT Current Sense Transformers for High‑Performance Power Electronics

    Samsung Launches Ultra-Compact 008004 High Q MLCC for Next-Generation RF Applications

    Nichicon Extends Rechargeable Batteries Temperature to Rival Supercapacitors

    Two‑capacitor paradox explained for engineers

    YAGEO Releases Compact RJ45 Connector for Multi‑Gigabit Ethernet

    Circuit Protection Technology Annual Dossier

    Trending Tags

    • Ripple Current
    • RF
    • Leakage Current
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
    • Snubber
    • Low ESR
    • Feedthrough
    • Derating
    • Dielectric Constant
    • New Products
    • Market Reports
  • VideoFilter
    • All
    • Antenna videos
    • Capacitor videos
    • Circuit Protection Video
    • Filter videos
    • Fuse videos
    • Inductor videos
    • Inter-Connect Video
    • Non-linear passives videos
    • Oscillator videos
    • Passive sensors videos
    • Resistor videos

    Two‑capacitor paradox explained for engineers

    Capacitances of Nonlinear MLCCs: What Datasheets Don’t Tell You

    Tapped Inductor Buck Converter Fundamentals

    Planar vs Conventional Transformer: When it Make Sense

    Modeling Fringing Field Losses in Inductors & Transformers

    Why Power Inductors Use a Ferrite Core With an Air Gap

    Transformer-Based Power-Line Harvester Magnetic Design

    Thermal Modeling of Magnetics

    Standard vs Planar LLC transformers Comparison for Battery Chargers

    Trending Tags

    • Capacitors explained
    • Inductors explained
    • Resistors explained
    • Filters explained
    • Application Video Guidelines
    • EMC
    • New Products
    • Ripple Current
    • Simulation
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
  • Knowledge Blog
  • DossiersNew
  • Suppliers
    • Who is Who
  • PCNS
    • PCNS 2025
    • PCNS 2023
    • PCNS 2021
    • PCNS 2019
    • PCNS 2017
  • Events
  • Home
  • NewsFilter
    • All
    • Aerospace & Defence
    • Antenna
    • Applications
    • Automotive
    • Capacitors
    • Circuit Protection Devices
    • electro-mechanical news
    • Filters
    • Fuses
    • Inductors
    • Industrial
    • Integrated Passives
    • inter-connect news
    • Market & Supply Chain
    • Market Insights
    • Medical
    • Modelling and Simulation
    • New Materials & Supply
    • New Technologies
    • Non-linear Passives
    • Oscillators
    • Passive Sensors News
    • Resistors
    • RF & Microwave
    • Telecommunication
    • Weekly Digest

    Samsung Introduced Low ESL 3-Terminal Reverse-Geometry MLCCs for High-Performance ADAS

    Würth Elektronik Presents New Bidirectional Digital Isolators

    Using Stress–Strain Curves to Diagnose Tantalum Powders for Capacitors

    Coilcraft Introduces SMT Current Sense Transformers for High‑Performance Power Electronics

    Samsung Launches Ultra-Compact 008004 High Q MLCC for Next-Generation RF Applications

    Nichicon Extends Rechargeable Batteries Temperature to Rival Supercapacitors

    Two‑capacitor paradox explained for engineers

    YAGEO Releases Compact RJ45 Connector for Multi‑Gigabit Ethernet

    Circuit Protection Technology Annual Dossier

    Trending Tags

    • Ripple Current
    • RF
    • Leakage Current
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
    • Snubber
    • Low ESR
    • Feedthrough
    • Derating
    • Dielectric Constant
    • New Products
    • Market Reports
  • VideoFilter
    • All
    • Antenna videos
    • Capacitor videos
    • Circuit Protection Video
    • Filter videos
    • Fuse videos
    • Inductor videos
    • Inter-Connect Video
    • Non-linear passives videos
    • Oscillator videos
    • Passive sensors videos
    • Resistor videos

    Two‑capacitor paradox explained for engineers

    Capacitances of Nonlinear MLCCs: What Datasheets Don’t Tell You

    Tapped Inductor Buck Converter Fundamentals

    Planar vs Conventional Transformer: When it Make Sense

    Modeling Fringing Field Losses in Inductors & Transformers

    Why Power Inductors Use a Ferrite Core With an Air Gap

    Transformer-Based Power-Line Harvester Magnetic Design

    Thermal Modeling of Magnetics

    Standard vs Planar LLC transformers Comparison for Battery Chargers

    Trending Tags

    • Capacitors explained
    • Inductors explained
    • Resistors explained
    • Filters explained
    • Application Video Guidelines
    • EMC
    • New Products
    • Ripple Current
    • Simulation
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
  • Knowledge Blog
  • DossiersNew
  • Suppliers
    • Who is Who
  • PCNS
    • PCNS 2025
    • PCNS 2023
    • PCNS 2021
    • PCNS 2019
    • PCNS 2017
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
Passive Components Blog
No Result
View All Result

Würth Elektronik Announces Partner Program

6.2.2026
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A

Würth Elektronik has introduced a new partner program designed to formalize and scale collaboration with key players around its passive components and related technologies.

The multi‑tier structure and defined support pillars aim to give design houses, semiconductor vendors and system integrators a clearer framework for co‑developing solutions and bringing designs to market faster.

RelatedPosts

Würth Elektronik Presents New Bidirectional Digital Isolators

Würth Elektronik Introduces Compact Flat-wire SMT Power Inductors for Automotive

Heatsink Design and Thermal Interface Materials for Reliable Electronics

Key features and benefits

The Würth Elektronik partner program is built around a three‑tier model (Entry Level, Silver, Premium) that reflects the depth of cooperation between the partner and Würth Elektronik. The intent is to provide a transparent path from initial technical collaboration up to strategic, co‑branded platforms.

Key characteristics include:

  • Entry based on low administrative overhead, typically requiring a non‑disclosure agreement, basic brand licensing, and a defined business model.
  • Progression criteria that look beyond volume, focusing on brand commitment, shared growth objectives, and the extent to which Würth Elektronik components are integrated into the partner’s designs.
  • Clear differentiation between Entry Level, Silver and Premium tiers, so engineering and purchasing teams understand what kind of support they can expect from the relationship.
  • A focus on passive components and related technologies that directly affect EMC behavior, power integrity, signal integrity and robustness of end systems.

For engineering organizations, this means better access to reference designs, joint validation and support when choosing inductors, capacitors, filters and protection elements around complex ICs or modules. For purchasing and supply chain, a formalized partnership can translate into earlier visibility on roadmaps and more stable sourcing options.

Four support pillars

To make the tiers meaningful in practice, the partner program is structured around four main support pillars:

  • Technical support: direct access to field application engineers and product specialists for design reviews, component selection, EMC optimization and troubleshooting in real projects.
  • Products and tools: preferential access to samples, evaluation boards, design kits and software tools (for example, component selection and simulation tools) to accelerate design‑in of Würth Elektronik components.
  • Marketing support: coordinated activities such as joint press releases, co‑branded reference platforms, whitepapers, webinars and trade‑fair presence to promote combined solutions.
  • Knowledge transfer and training: targeted workshops, training sessions and documentation to keep engineering teams up to date on new passive component series, application notes, layout recommendations and standards.

For companies working on power supplies, automotive ECUs, RF front ends or industrial control, these pillars can significantly reduce the risk and effort of integrating new passive components or transitioning to new series.

Typical partners and use cases

The first public partner examples provide a good indication of the program’s target audience. Texas Instruments has been presented as a Premium Partner, reflecting deep cooperation between a major analog/mixed‑signal semiconductor supplier and a passive component specialist. This is particularly relevant for power management, signal conditioning, data conversion and RF designs where component interoperability and reference designs are critical.

Nexperia, a global semiconductor manufacturer, has joined as a Silver Partner, underlining the program’s fit for companies that provide discrete devices, logic, MOSFETs or power ICs and want to align their ecosystems with proven inductors, capacitors, ferrites and protection components. Typical use cases include:

  • Power supply reference designs where semiconductor vendors recommend Würth Elektronik magnetics, capacitors and filters as baseline BOM options.
  • Automotive and industrial platforms where partners coordinate qualification levels, derating recommendations and layout examples around safety‑relevant and high‑reliability applications.
  • RF, wireless and IoT designs where antenna matching components, EMI suppression elements and DC/DC converter magnetics are co‑validated with specific chipsets.

Technical highlights of the program concept

There are several technical implications that are relevant for engineers:

  • Early access to new series and technologies: partners can typically evaluate upcoming inductors, capacitors, EMI filters or surge protection components in pre‑release phases, allowing design‑in before public release, according to the respective manufacturer datasheets.
  • Reference designs and simulation models: coordinated development between IC vendors and Würth Elektronik often results in reference designs with validated passive BOMs, complete with inductor and capacitor models, EMC test data and layout recommendations.
  • System‑level optimization: instead of selecting passive components in isolation, partners can work on system‑level targets such as efficiency, conducted/radiated emissions, thermal behavior and long‑term reliability, and select component values and packages accordingly.
  • Standards‑aligned design: training and joint work can help ensure that component choices support compliance with relevant EMC, safety and automotive standards, as specified in the underlying datasheets and reference designs.

For teams designing power stages, converters or high‑speed digital interfaces, these aspects can significantly shorten the iteration loop between simulations, prototypes and compliance testing.

For practicing design engineers, a structured partner program has several practical consequences when working with passive components:

  • Better alignment between IC datasheets and passive component recommendations: when a semiconductor vendor is an official partner, its reference designs are more likely to feature up‑to‑date Würth Elektronik components with realistic derating, footprint and thermal guidance.
  • Faster root cause analysis: with closer ties between the semiconductor and passive component suppliers, cross‑vendor debug of EMI issues, stability problems, saturation behavior or resonance effects can be more efficient.
  • Reduced qualification effort: where partners coordinate on qualification and reliability aspects, engineers can sometimes benefit from pre‑qualified BOM combinations for specific sectors (for example, industrial or automotive) according to the latest datasheet information.
  • More consistent lifecycle planning: a partner relationship can improve transparency on lifecycle status, second‑source options at series‑level and long‑term supply expectations, important for long‑lived industrial and automotive platforms.

Source

This article is based on information published by Würth Elektronik about the launch of its partner program.

References

  1. Würth Elektronik press release – Together on Course for Innovation (Partner Program)
  2. Würth Elektronik partner program overview

Related

Recent Posts

Würth Elektronik Presents New Bidirectional Digital Isolators

20.5.2026
15

Circuit Protection Technology Annual Dossier

15.5.2026
36

SCHURTER Buys Biaodi to Boost High-Voltage Protection Portfolio

14.5.2026
54

European Components Distribution Shows Strong Q1 2026 Growth Amid Geopolitical Uncertainty

7.5.2026
89

Würth Elektronik Introduces Compact Flat-wire SMT Power Inductors for Automotive

5.5.2026
72

KYOCERA AVX Extends MLV Varistors for 48V Automotive Protection

5.5.2026
42

Murata Introduces Crystal and NTC Set for Automotive UWB Timing

30.4.2026
34

DigiKey Adds 31k New In‑Stock Parts in Q1 2026

29.4.2026
20

Murata New MLCC Bulk Case Packaging Cuts Packaging Material by 99%

27.4.2026
113

Upcoming Events

Jun 2
16:00 - 17:00 CEST

Calculation, Simulation and Measurement of 800V EMC Filters

Jun 16
16:00 - 17:00 CEST

EMC with EMC – EMC‑compliant design with electromechanical connectors

View Calendar

Popular Posts

  • Buck Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Boost Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Flyback Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • LLC Resonant Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • MLCC and Ceramic Capacitors

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Capacitor Charging and Discharging

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • What Electronics Engineer Needs to Know About Passive Low Pass Filters

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Dual Active Bridge (DAB) Topology

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Ripple Current and its Effects on the Performance of Capacitors

    3 shares
    Share 3 Tweet 0
  • Samsung Electro-Mechanics Releases High-Capacitance MLCCs for AI Server Applications

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Newsletter Subscription

 

Passive Components Blog

© EPCI - Leading Passive Components Educational and Information Site

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • EPCI Membership & Advertisement
  • About

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Knowledge Blog
  • PCNS

© EPCI - Leading Passive Components Educational and Information Site

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Go to mobile version