The Arduino Nano 33 IoT is the
easiest and cheapest point of entry to enhance existing devices (and creating
new ones) to be part of the IoT and designing pico-network applications.
Whether you are looking at building a sensor network connected to your office
or home router, or if you want to create a BLE device sending data to a
cellphone, the Nano 33 IoT is your one-stop-solution for many of the basic IoT
application scenarios.
The board's main processor is a low
power Arm® Cortex®-M0 32-bit SAMD21. The WiFi and Bluetooth® connectivity is
performed with a module from u-blox, the NINA-W10, a low power chipset
operating in the 2.4GHz range. On top of those, secure communication is ensured
through the Microchip® ECC608 crypto chip. Besides that, you can find a 6 axis
IMU, what makes this board perfect for simple vibration alarm systems,
pedometers, relative positioning of robots, etc.
WiFi
and Arduino IoT Cloud
At Arduino we have made connecting
to a WiFi network as easy as getting an LED to blink. You can get your board to
connect to any kind of existing WiFi network, or use it to create your own
Arduino Access Point. The specific set of examples we provide for the Nano 33
IoT can be consulted at the WiFiNINA
library reference page.
It is also possible to connect your
board to different Cloud services, Arduino's own among others. Here some
examples on how to get the Arduino boards to connect to:
Note: while most of the
above-shown examples are running on the MKR WiFi 1010, both boards have the
same processor and wireless chipset, which means it will be possible to
replicate them with the Nano 33 IoT.
Bluetooth®
and BLE
The communications chipset on the
Nano 33 IoT can be both a BLE and Bluetooth® client and host device. Something
pretty unique in the world of microcontroller platforms. If you want to see how
easy it is to create a Bluetooth® central or a peripheral device, explore the
examples at our ArduinoBLE library.
We
Make it Open for you to Hack Along
The Nano 33 IoT is a dual processor
device that invites for experimentation. Hacking the WiFiNINA module allows you
to, for example, make use of both WiFi and BLE / Bluetooth® at once on the
board. Yet another possibility is having a super-lightweight version of linux
running on the module, while the main microcontroller controls low level
devices like motors, or screens. These experimental techniques, require
advanced hacking on your side. They are possible via modifying the module's
firmware that you can find at our github repositories.
BEWARE: this kind of hacking breaks
the certification of your WiFiNINA module, do it at your own risk.
The Arduino Nano 33 IoT is based on
the SAMD21 microcontroller.
Microcontroller |
SAMD21 Cortex®-M0+ 32bit low power
ARM MCU (datasheet) |
Radio module |
u-blox NINA-W102 (datasheet) |
Secure Element |
ATECC608A (datasheet) |
Operating Voltage |
3.3V |
Input Voltage (limit) |
21V |
DC Current per I/O Pin |
7 mA |
Clock Speed |
48MHz |
CPU Flash Memory |
256KB |
SRAM |
32KB |
EEPROM |
none |
Digital Input / Output Pins |
14 |
PWM Pins |
11 (2, 3, 5, 6, 9, 10, 11, 12, 16
/ A2, 17 / A3, 19 / A5) |
UART |
1 |
SPI |
1 |
I2C |
1 |
Analog Input Pins |
8 (ADC 8/10/12 bit) |
Analog Output Pins |
1 (DAC 10 bit) |
External Interrupts |
All digital pins (all analog pins
can also be used as interrput pins, but will have duplicated interrupt
numbers) |
LED_BUILTIN |
13 |
USB |
Native in the SAMD21 Processor |
IMU |
LSM6DS3 (datasheet) |
Length |
45 mm |
Width |
18 mm |
Weight |
5 gr (with headers) |
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