Easy to confirm, multiple ways:
1. Check the V_IN spec on the output voltage parameter.
2. Note that it's the same basic thing, ZXGD (Zetex Gate Driver?), 3000 family. They only differ by amperage.
3. Incidentally, if you're following Mouser's catalog information, be very skeptical. It's mostly correct, but outliers and simply-wrong data are always present.
Keep in mind, ultimately, what you're buying is exactly two things: a. the manufacturer and part number in the listing, and b. whatever the manufacturer says that is. By "says", I mean preferably obtaining the datasheet directly from the source. (Although I don't think I've seen an inaccurate datasheet from a supplier. I have seen some datasheets that
don't exist on the manufacturer's website! There was a time when Panasonic's website was basically unavailable for over a year. Wurth Elektronik still seems to be figuring this out in some places...) And even then, sometimes not even that, as stocking errors are infrequent (usually in the parts-per-thousand rate). Any added data in the catalog, may be helpful, but may be incorrect!
Anyway, it's always been strange to me that they advertise it as if it were a fully featured gate driver, and conveniently leave off the part about how you'd happen to go about generating a 10V (or more) "logic" signal with a cool nanosecond risetime.
They used to make complementary duals that were specified as you'd expect (ZXTC2045, etc.). Maybe they still do, I haven't checked in a long time. One would assume the reason is as any: cheapness; why bother testing and specifying them as BJTs, when you can save a few seconds of test time as "gate drivers"?
Well, beware such steps. Sometimes they're okay. (Here, as long as you're aware that it's just stupid BJTs, it's unlikely to spread from that.) Sometimes it's a plan to loosen specs that you've been depending on.
But such is life, buyer beware. Yes, you must be like a lawyer, reading datasheets carefully. In time you will come to understand them (or at least, better able to puzzle over the poorly written ones..), though you won't really spend less time reading them (if you're not spending 10+ minutes reading a datasheet before making a final decision, it's probably not a good decision).
Tim