Book Image

Internet of Things with Arduino Cookbook

By : Marco Schwartz
Book Image

Internet of Things with Arduino Cookbook

By: Marco Schwartz

Overview of this book

Arduino is a powerful and very versatile platform used by millions of people around the world to create DIY electronics projects. It can be connected to a wide variety of sensors and other components, making it the ideal platform to build amazing Internet of Things (IoT) projects on—the next wave in the era of computing. This book takes a recipe-based approach, giving you precise examples on how to build IoT projects of all types using the Arduino platform. You will come across projects from several fields, including the popular robotics and home automation domains. Along with being introduced to several forms of interactions within IoT, including projects that directly interact with well-known web services such as Twitter, Facebook, and Dropbox we will also focus on Machine-to-Machine (M2M) interactions, where Arduino projects interact without any human intervention. You will learn to build a few quick and easy-to-make fun projects that will really expand your horizons in the world of IoT and Arduino. Each chapter ends with a troubleshooting recipe that will help you overcome any problems faced while building these projects. By the end of this book, you will not only know how to build these projects, but also have the skills necessary to build your own IoT projects in the future.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Internet of Things with Arduino Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Cloud smoke detector


In several countries around the world, it is not mandatory to install a smoke detector inside your home. In this recipe, we are going to build our own smoke detector that will automatically send you alerts when smoke is detected in your home.

Getting ready

For this recipe, you are going to need a smoke detector, based on the MQ-2 gas sensor. This is the component that I used for this project:

Let's now see how to assemble this project. First, place the Arduino board on the breadboard. Then, connect the + pin of the sensor to Arduino VCC, the – pin of the sensor to GND, and finally the remaining sensor pin to A0. This is the final result:

We can now test the sensor. Indeed, we need to calibrate it so we know what is the output of the sensor when no smoke is detected. For that, I simply used the default sketch AnalogReadSerial given with the Arduino IDE. Upload...