Store

DFRobot

$6.92 |
In stock at supplier
No reviews yet

The LIS2DW12 is a low power high-performance three-axis linear accelerometer, featuring low power(50nA), low noise(1.3mgRMS), 32 FIFO, ±2g/±4g/±8g/±16g full ...

Estimated Delivery
Arrives
Disclaimer
View Markdown
Secure checkout

The LIS2DW12 is a low power high-performance three-axis linear accelerometer, featuring low power(50nA), low noise(1.3mgRMS), 32 FIFO, ±2g/±4g/±8g/±16g full scale, 16-bit data output, and 1.6~1.6KHz bandwidth. The sensor comes with two independent programmable interrupts and a dedicated internal engine that can achieve various motion and acceleration detection including free-fall, portrait/landscape detection, 6D/4D orientation detection, configurable single/double-tap recognition, stationary/motion detection, wakeup for smart power saving, etc. And for your convenience, we provide you with sample programs(C and Python) for the above functions.


Connect Diagram


Features
  • Selectable scales: ±2g/±4g/±8g/±16g
  • 16-bit data output
  • Two independent programmable interrupts
  • Dedicated internal engine for achieving various functions: free-fall, portrait/landscape detection, 6D/4D orientation detection, configurable single/double-tap recognition, stationary/motion detection, wakeup for smart power saving, etc.

  • Applications
  • Self-balancing Robot
  • Free-fall detection
  • Human Action Recognition
  • Gesture recognition and gaming
  • Tap/double-tap recognition
  • Motion detection for wearables

  • Specification
  • Operating Voltage: 3.3V
  • Operating Current: 50nA (low power consumption mode)/0.17mA (high performance mode)
  • Interface: SPI/I2C
  • I2C Address: 0x19(default address)/0x18(optional: pull down the SDO pin to select)
  • Optional Scale: ±2g/±4g/±8g/±16g
  • Operating Temperature: -40°C~+85°C
  • 16-Bit Data Output
  • Frequency: 1.6Hz~1600Hz
  • Ultra-low Noise: 1.3 mg RMS (low power mode)
  • 32-level FIFO (first-in first-out buffer zone)
  • 10000g high shock survivability
  • ECOPACK, RoHS and “Green” compliant
  • Module size: 15 x 20 (mm) / 0.59 x 0.79 (inch)

  • Documents
  • Product wiki

  • Shipping List
  • Fermion: LIS2DW12 Triple Axis Accelerometer Sensor (Breakout) (±16g) x1
  • 2.54-4P Black Single Pin Header x2
  • Jargon buster

    Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.

    6D/4D orientation detection
    6D/4D orientation detection is a sensor feature that recognises which way the board is facing, such as face-up, face-down, portrait or landscape positions. It matters if you want a project to react to being flipped, tilted or placed in a particular orientation without writing all the detection logic yourself.
    breakout
    A breakout is a small circuit board that makes a tiny or hard-to-solder component easier to connect to with standard pins. It matters because this OLED module can be wired into a microcontroller project without needing to solder directly to the display’s fine contacts.
    FIFO
    FIFO stands for “first in, first out” and is a small memory buffer inside the sensor that stores recent readings in order. This matters because it can help capture motion data without the microcontroller needing to read the sensor every single instant.
    I2C
    I2C is a two-wire communication bus used by many sensors and small modules. It matters because several I2C devices can share the same two wires, but each device needs a compatible address and your controller must support I2C.
    I2C address
    An I2C address is the number a device uses so a microcontroller can tell it apart from other devices on the same I2C bus. It matters because two devices with the same fixed address may conflict if used together.
    Motion detection
    A camera feature that checks the image for changes that suggest something has moved. It matters because your project can use movement as a trigger instead of constantly saving or processing every frame.
    RMS
    RMS is a way of describing the effective level of an AC signal, such as an audio output voltage. It helps compare audio output levels more meaningfully than a peak voltage number.
    SPI
    A fast serial communication bus often used for displays, memory cards, and sensors. It matters because SPI devices need specific pins for clock and data, plus a separate chip-select line for each device.

    Supplier page — dfrobot.com

    Supplier Description · 711.0 KB · Click any page to view full size

    Download PDF

    Related Tutorials

    Free guides on learn.littlebird.com.au

    Stella
    Stella Expert

    Ask me anything about this product

    Maddy, co-founder of Little Bird

    Need help? We're here for you!

    Hi, I'm Maddy. My team and I are ready to help with your order or any questions.