SparkFun
AS7343 Qwiic Spectral Sensor
· MPN: SEN-23220
Measure visible and near-infrared light with a compact Qwiic breakout based on the AS7343 multi-spectral sensor. It covers approximately 380nm to 1000nm and ...
Get notified when back in stock
Measure visible and near-infrared light with a compact Qwiic breakout based on the AS7343 multi-spectral sensor. It covers approximately 380nm to 1000nm and is suited to reflected, emitted and transmitted light measurements for spectroscopy tasks such as colour matching and spectral signature analysis.
The AS7343 uses a 5x5 photodiode array with 14 channels, including 11 visible-spectrum bands plus dedicated near-infrared and flicker detection photodiodes. It is designed for high sensitivity, including low-light measurements and operation behind tinted glass or other external filters.
Communication is over I2C, with two Qwiic connectors for solderless connection, plus 0.1-inch PTHs for SDA, SCL, power and additional pins. The breakout includes a white sensing LED, pads for adding your own sensing LED, a 1.8V regulator and level shifting from the 3.3V Qwiic bus.
Documentation and software support include a schematic, KiCad files, board dimensions, AS7343 datasheet, hookup guide, SparkFun AS7343 Arduino Library, SparkFun AS7343 Python Package and GitHub repository.
Features:
- Sensor: 14-Channel Multi-Spectral Sensor
- Spectrum: Measures both Visible Spectrum and Near-Infrared
- Detection: Flicker Detection
- Sensitivity: High Sensitivity
- Low-light use: Operates in low-light or behind dark glass/other external filters
- LED control: Integrated LED Driver
- GPIO: 1 GPIO for measurement/LED synchronizing (Defaults as Output)
- Connectors: 2x Qwiic Connectors
- Headers: 0.1"-Spaced PTHs
- I2C pins: SDA/SCL
- Interrupt: INT (Active Low)
- GPIO pin: GPIO
- Power: 3.3V
- Ground: GND
- LEDs: LEDs
- Power LED: Power (Red)
- Sensing LED: White (Sensing)
- Optional LED: PTHs for User-Populated Sensing LED (Optional)
- Regulation: 1.8V Voltage Regulator
Specifications:
- Wavelength Range: ~380nm - 1000nm
- Visible spectrum channels: 11 Channels on the Visible Spectrum
- Near-infrared channels: 1 Channel on Near-Infrared
- Clear channel: 1 "Clear" Channel for entire Visible Spectrum
- Near-infrared photodiode range: 845-865 nm
- Sensor supply voltage: 1.8V Supply Voltage
- Sensor active current: 210µA (Typ.) - 280µA (Max.)
- Sensor idle current: 40µA (Typ.) - 60µA (Max.)
- Sensor sleep current: 0.7µA (Typ.) - 5µA (Max.)
- Qwiic voltage: 3.3V
- Board dimensions: 1 in. by 1 in.
- PTH spacing: 0.1"
- Breakout active current: 697µA@3.3V
- Breakout idle current: 264µA@3.3V
- Breakout sleep current: 3µA@3.3V
- Board measurement current without white LED on: ~697µA
- Board measurement current with white LED on: ~4.26mA
A handy sensor breakout for colour sensing, spectroscopy experiments, material comparison and light measurement projects using the SparkFun Qwiic ecosystem.
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- active LOW
- Active LOW describes a signal that is treated as active, asserted or 'on' when it sits at a low voltage near ground, rather than at a high voltage. It applies to inputs, outputs and control lines (such as reset or chip-select), so it matters when wiring devices so that signal levels are interpreted as intended.
- AS7343
- The AS7343 is a multi-channel spectral (light-sensing) chip that measures light across many wavelength bands. Knowing the exact sensor model matters because software drivers, example code, channel count and measurement features are tied to that specific part.
- breakout
- A breakout board carries a small or fine-pitched component and brings its connections out to standard, breadboard- and header-friendly pins. Describing a part as a breakout means it can be wired into a project without soldering directly to the component's tiny contacts.
- flicker detection
- Flicker detection measures rapid changes in light output, such as the pulsing from some LEDs or mains-powered lamps. This matters if you are characterising light sources or need to avoid lighting that may interfere with measurements or cameras.
- GND
- GND is the ground or reference connection (0 V) for a circuit. When connecting two devices together, their grounds must be joined so both agree on what counts as a low or high signal.
- GPIO
- General-purpose input/output pins are microcontroller pins you can set in software to read signals, switch devices on and off, or connect to peripherals. The number of GPIO pins matters because it limits how many buttons, LEDs, sensors, and other parts you can wire directly to the board.
- Headers
- Rows of connector contacts on a fixed pitch (commonly 2.54 mm) used to link a board to a breadboard, jumper wires, or another board. They come as male pin headers and female socket headers; when a module ships with pre-soldered headers it can be used straight away, whereas bare pads require soldering the pins yourself.
- 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.
- LED
- A light-emitting diode (LED) is a small electronic component that emits light when current flows through it in the correct direction. Because it only conducts one way, its polarity matters, and a through-hole LED must be soldered the correct way around to light up.
- LED driver
- An LED driver is a control chip or circuit that supplies and switches power to LEDs. For a display board, it reduces the number of microcontroller pins needed and handles tasks like lighting the right segments and adjusting brightness.
- photodiode
- A photodiode is a light-sensitive component that produces a small electrical signal, a current or voltage, when light falls on it. When a sensor uses several photodiodes, each can be tuned to a different part of the spectrum so the chip can measure several wavelength bands separately.
- PTH
- Plated through-hole means the pin holes are metal-lined so solder connects the pad on both sides of the board. It is useful for connectors and headers that need a strong mechanical and electrical connection.
- Qwiic
- Qwiic is a plug-in connector system for I2C devices that uses small 4-pin cables, so you can connect compatible sensors without soldering. It matters because your controller or adapter also needs Qwiic, or you will need a cable or breakout to wire it up.
- SDA/SCL
- SDA and SCL are the two signal lines used by an I2C bus: data and clock. Seeing these names helps you identify the correct connections when wiring I2C devices, even though Qwiic cables usually hide that wiring for you.
- Torque
- A twisting force that causes something to rotate, usually measured in newton-metres or kilogram-centimetres. It matters when choosing motors, servos, gears, and tools because higher torque is needed to lift heavier loads, turn larger wheels, or move mechanisms without stalling.
Find this product in
Brands
Sensors & Input
AS7343 Qwiic Schematic
Schematic · 200.0 KB · Click any page to view full size
AS7343 Datasheet
Datasheet · 2.0 MB · Click any page to view full size
Supplier page — sparkfun.com
Supplier Description · 841.4 KB · Click any page to view full size
Resources & Downloads
Guides, code examples, and more