Our mission is to empower you with precise temperature and humidity measurements, ensuring that you can effortlessly maintain a balanced, comfortable, and eco-conscious living or working space
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Hardware Overview
How does it work?
Temp&Hum 2 Click is based on the Si7034, a digital humidity and temperature sensor IC with I2C interface, from Silicon Labs. It is a digital relative humidity and a temperature sensor that integrates temperature and humidity sensor elements, an analog-to-digital converter, signal processing, calibration, and data correction on the chip. Each chip is factory calibrated, and the calibration data is stored in its non-volatile memory. The maximum accuracy achieved with this sensor is ± 4% RH for the humidity range from 0 to 80%. Besides the humidity sensing element, this sensor includes an accurate thermal sensor, which can achieve up to ±0.4 °C. It is used in conjunction with the humidity measurement, to allow thermal compensation of the relative humidity measurements. This sensor IC also has an integrated heating element that is used to evaporate condensation reducing the effect of the offset accumulation when used in high humidity conditions, or to implement dew-point
measurement when the Si7034 is used with a separate temperature sensor. The heating element current can be adjusted by the appropriate bits in the Humidity Control Register. Due to the nature of the used sensors, a special care should be taken to reduce the sensor contamination to a minimum. Particles, dirt or other artifacts collected on the surface of the exposed polymer film will affect its ability to measure the humidity, and therefore, the manufacturer recommends protecting the sensor against particles. The sensor otherwise has a long aging period with minimal drift. Synthetic long-term stability tests show less than 0.25 %RH per year drift. The data provided by the IC is ready to be used directly. Two measurements are done when a command is received via the I2C. One is the humidity measurement, while the second is temperature measurement, used for the compensation. Si7034 IC operates on 1.8V and therefore, a small LDO has to be used to convert 3.3V from the mikroBUS™
power rail, down to 1.8V. In addition, the I2C signal voltage levels also have to be converted so it can be used with the MCUs operated with 3.3V. For this purpose, the Click board™ utilizes the PCA9306, a level shifting IC, made by Texas Instruments. It uses 1.8V as the first reference voltage and 3,3V from the mikroBUS™ power rail as the second reference voltage, shifting the I2C communication signal levels, allowing this Click board™ to be used with MCUs operated at 3.3V. The sensor IC is physically located away from other components on the Click board™, so the heating influence of the surrounding components or PCB is reduced to a minimum, allowing the accuracy of the Click board™ to stay within the specifications. The i2C lines of the IC are routed to the mikroBUS™ and supplied by the pull-up resistors, allowing this Click board™ to be used right out of the box. Temp&Hum 2 click uses only 3.3V rail from the mikroBUS™.
Features overview
Development board
Nucleo 32 with STM32F031K6 MCU board provides an affordable and flexible platform for experimenting with STM32 microcontrollers in 32-pin packages. Featuring Arduino™ Nano connectivity, it allows easy expansion with specialized shields, while being mbed-enabled for seamless integration with online resources. The
board includes an on-board ST-LINK/V2-1 debugger/programmer, supporting USB reenumeration with three interfaces: Virtual Com port, mass storage, and debug port. It offers a flexible power supply through either USB VBUS or an external source. Additionally, it includes three LEDs (LD1 for USB communication, LD2 for power,
and LD3 as a user LED) and a reset push button. The STM32 Nucleo-32 board is supported by various Integrated Development Environments (IDEs) such as IAR™, Keil®, and GCC-based IDEs like AC6 SW4STM32, making it a versatile tool for developers.
Microcontroller Overview
MCU Card / MCU

Architecture
ARM Cortex-M0
MCU Memory (KB)
32
Silicon Vendor
STMicroelectronics
Pin count
32
RAM (Bytes)
4096
You complete me!
Accessories
Click Shield for Nucleo-32 is the perfect way to expand your development board's functionalities with STM32 Nucleo-32 pinout. The Click Shield for Nucleo-32 provides two mikroBUS™ sockets to add any functionality from our ever-growing range of Click boards™. We are fully stocked with everything, from sensors and WiFi transceivers to motor control and audio amplifiers. The Click Shield for Nucleo-32 is compatible with the STM32 Nucleo-32 board, providing an affordable and flexible way for users to try out new ideas and quickly create prototypes with any STM32 microcontrollers, choosing from the various combinations of performance, power consumption, and features. The STM32 Nucleo-32 boards do not require any separate probe as they integrate the ST-LINK/V2-1 debugger/programmer and come with the STM32 comprehensive software HAL library and various packaged software examples. This development platform provides users with an effortless and common way to combine the STM32 Nucleo-32 footprint compatible board with their favorite Click boards™ in their upcoming projects.
Used MCU Pins
mikroBUS™ mapper
Take a closer look
Click board™ Schematic

Step by step
Project assembly
Track your results in real time
Application Output
1. Application Output - In Debug mode, the 'Application Output' window enables real-time data monitoring, offering direct insight into execution results. Ensure proper data display by configuring the environment correctly using the provided tutorial.

2. UART Terminal - Use the UART Terminal to monitor data transmission via a USB to UART converter, allowing direct communication between the Click board™ and your development system. Configure the baud rate and other serial settings according to your project's requirements to ensure proper functionality. For step-by-step setup instructions, refer to the provided tutorial.

3. Plot Output - The Plot feature offers a powerful way to visualize real-time sensor data, enabling trend analysis, debugging, and comparison of multiple data points. To set it up correctly, follow the provided tutorial, which includes a step-by-step example of using the Plot feature to display Click board™ readings. To use the Plot feature in your code, use the function: plot(*insert_graph_name*, variable_name);. This is a general format, and it is up to the user to replace 'insert_graph_name' with the actual graph name and 'variable_name' with the parameter to be displayed.

Software Support
Library Description
This library contains API for Temp&Hum 2 Click driver.
Key functions:
temhum2_get_eletronic_id
- This function for reads Eletronic IDtemphum2_set_mode
- Functions for set measurement modetemphum2_get_measurement
- Functions for mesurement
Open Source
Code example
The complete application code and a ready-to-use project are available through the NECTO Studio Package Manager for direct installation in the NECTO Studio. The application code can also be found on the MIKROE GitHub account.
/*!
* \file
* \brief TempHum2 Click example
*
* # Description
* This application measures temperature and humidity.
*
* The demo application is composed of two sections :
*
* ## Application Init
* Initializes driver init, set work mode and Heater
*
* ## Application Task
* Reads temperature and humidity and logs values on usbuart for every 500ms.
*
*
* \author MikroE Team
*
*/
// ------------------------------------------------------------------- INCLUDES
#include "board.h"
#include "log.h"
#include "temphum2.h"
// ------------------------------------------------------------------ VARIABLES
static temphum2_t temphum2;
static log_t logger;
// ------------------------------------------------------ APPLICATION FUNCTIONS
void application_init ( void )
{
log_cfg_t log_cfg;
temphum2_cfg_t cfg;
/**
* Logger initialization.
* Default baud rate: 115200
* Default log level: LOG_LEVEL_DEBUG
* @note If USB_UART_RX and USB_UART_TX
* are defined as HAL_PIN_NC, you will
* need to define them manually for log to work.
* See @b LOG_MAP_USB_UART macro definition for detailed explanation.
*/
LOG_MAP_USB_UART( log_cfg );
log_init( &logger, &log_cfg );
log_info( &logger, "---- Application Init ----" );
// Click initialization.
temphum2_cfg_setup( &cfg );
TEMPHUM2_MAP_MIKROBUS( cfg, MIKROBUS_1 );
temphum2_init( &temphum2, &cfg );
temphum2_default_cfg( &temphum2 );
}
void application_task ( void )
{
float data_buffer[ 2 ];
temphum2_get_measurement( &temphum2, &data_buffer[ 0 ] );
log_printf( &logger, " --- Temperature : %.2f C \r\n ", data_buffer[ 0 ] );
log_printf( &logger, " --- Humidity : %.2f RH \r\n ", data_buffer[ 1 ] );
Delay_ms( 500 );
}
void main ( void )
{
application_init( );
for ( ; ; )
{
application_task( );
}
}
// ------------------------------------------------------------------------ END
Additional Support
Resources
Category:Temperature & humidity