Book Image

Raspberry Pi Pico DIY Workshop

By : Sai Yamanoor, Srihari Yamanoor
Book Image

Raspberry Pi Pico DIY Workshop

By: Sai Yamanoor, Srihari Yamanoor

Overview of this book

The Raspberry Pi Pico is the latest addition to the Raspberry Pi family of products. Introduced by the Raspberry Pi Foundation, based on their RP2040 chip, it is a tiny, fast microcontroller that packs enough punch to power an extensive range of applications. Raspberry Pi Pico DIY Workshop will help you get started with your own Pico and leverage its features to develop innovative products. This book begins with an introduction to the Raspberry Pi Pico, giving you a thorough understanding of the RP2040's peripherals and different development boards for the Pico designed and manufactured by various organizations. You'll explore add-on hardware and programming language options available for the Pico. Next, you'll focus on practical skills, starting with a simple LED blinking project and building up to a giant seven-segment display, while working with application examples such as citizen science displays, digital health, and robots. You'll also work on exciting projects around gardening, building a weather station, tracking air quality, hacking your personal health, and building a robot, along with discovering tips and tricks to give you the confidence needed to make the best use of RP2040. By the end of this Raspberry Pi book, you'll have built a solid foundation in product development using the RP2040, acquired a skillset crucial for embedded device development, and have a robot that you built yourself.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Section 1: An Introduction to the Pico
6
Section 2: Learning by Making
10
Section 3: Advanced Topics

Testing the sensors

In this section, we will set up and test the individual components used in the project before we put them together.

Testing the BME280 sensor

In this section, we will test the BME280 sensor (as shown in the following screenshot):

Figure 5.2 – The BME280 Pressure Sensor

The BME280 Pressure Sensor can be used to measure temperature, humidity, and atmospheric pressure. It comes with an I2C interface, and its address on the I2C bus is 0x77.

The sensor is interfaced to the Pico, as shown in the following schematic:

Figure 5.3 – The Fritzing schematic for the BME280 sensor

In the preceding schematic, the sensor is interfaced to the Pico as follows, where the left side of the arrow refers to a pin on the BME280 breakout board, while the right side of the arrow refers to a pin on the Raspberry Pi Pico:

  • VIN → VBUS
  • SCL → GP9
  • SDA → GP8
  • GND

    Pull-Up Resistors for...