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Developing IoT Projects with ESP32

You're reading from  Developing IoT Projects with ESP32

Product type Book
Published in Sep 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838641160
Pages 474 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Vedat Ozan Oner Vedat Ozan Oner
Profile icon Vedat Ozan Oner
Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1: Using ESP32
2. Chapter 1: Getting Started with ESP32 3. Chapter 2: Talking to the Earth – Sensors and Actuators 4. Chapter 3: Impressive Outputs with Displays 5. Chapter 4: A Deep Dive into the Advanced Features 6. Chapter 5: Practice – Multisensor for Your Room 7. Section 2: Local Network Communication
8. Chapter 6: A Good Old Friend – Wi-Fi 9. Chapter 7: Security First! 10. Chapter 8: I Can Speak BLE 11. Chapter 9: Practice – Making Your Home Smart 12. Section 3: Cloud Communication
13. Chapter 10: No Cloud, No IoT – Cloud Platforms and Services 14. Chapter 11: Connectivity Is Never Enough – Third-Party Integrations 15. Chapter 12: Practice – A Voice-Controlled Smart Fan 16. Answers 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Working with sensors

To relate to the physical world, we use sensors. For example, a button or a pot are sensors, but when we need to measure different phenomena—let's say temperature—we can use a temperature sensor with a more advanced communication interface rather than a simple GPIO or ADC interface. In this section, we'll cover plenty of sensors with different communication interfaces to get familiar with those interfaces. Let's start with a popular temperature and humidity sensor, DHT11.

Reading ambient temperature and humidity with DHT11

DHT11 is a basic temperature and humidity sensor with a very low price tag. The operational voltage is between 3 and 5 V, so we can use it by directly connecting to our ESP32 without a need for a level shifter. The temperature range is 0-50°C, with ±2°C accuracy and 1°C resolution. We can also use it to measure humidity between 20% and 90% with ±5% accuracy. It already comes calibrated...

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