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LSM303DLHC 3D Compass, Accelerometer Carrier with Voltage Regulator

Product Code: Pololu #2124

LSM303DLHC 3D Compass, Accelerometer Carrier with Voltage Regulator

₹1,779.00
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Availability: Discontinued


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This board has been replaced by the newer version of Pololu #2127

Overview

This board is a compact (0.5″ × 0.8″) breakout board for ST’s LSM303DLHC 3-axis accelerometer and 3-axis magnetometer; we therefore recommend careful reading of the LSM303DLHC datasheet (629k pdf) before using this product. The LSM303DLHC is a great IC, but its small package makes it difficult for the typical student or hobbyist to use. It also operates at voltages below 3.6 V, which can make interfacing difficult for microcontrollers operating at 5 V. This carrier board addresses these issues by incorporating additional electronics, including a 3.3 V voltage regulator and level-shifting circuits, while keeping the overall size as compact as possible. The board ships fully populated with its SMD components, including the LSM303, as shown in the product picture.

Compared to the LSM303DLH and LSM303DLM used on our original compass and accelerometer carrier boards, the LSM303DLHC features improved magnetic sensing resolution and a wider acceleration measurement range (±2g to ±16g). This LSM303DLHC carrier is 0.1″ shorter than the earlier boards while remaining pin-compatible, although changes in I²C addresses and configuration registers mean that code written to interface with an LSM303DLH or LSM303DLM might need to be modified to work with an LSM303DLHC.

The LSM303 has many configurable options, including dynamically selectable sensitivities for the accelerometer and magnetometer, a choice of output data rates, and two independently-programmable external inertial interrupt pins. The magnetometer and accelerometer can be individually turned on and off to save power. The six independent magnetic and acceleration readings (sometimes called 6DOF) are available through an I²C/TWI interface and can be used for many applications, including making a tilt-compensated compass that can be used to determine headings regardless of how the board is inclined (ST provides an application note(1MB pdf) that explains the details of making one).

The carrier board includes a low-dropout linear voltage regulator that provides the 3.3 V required by the LSM303, which allows the sensor to be powered from a 2.5–5.5 V supply. The regulator output is available on the VDD pin and can supply almost 150 mA to external devices. The breakout board also includes a circuit that shifts the I²C clock and data lines to the same logic voltage level as the supplied VIN, making it simple to interface the board with 5 V systems, and the board’s 0.1″ pin spacing makes it easy to use with standard solderless breadboards and 0.1″ perfboards.

For sensor fusion applications, our MinIMU-9 v2 inertial measurement unit combines the LSM303DLHC with an L3GD20 3-axis gyro on a board the same size as this LSM303DLHC carrier, providing nine independent readings that can be used to calculate an absolute orientation.

Specifications

  • Dimensions: 0.5″ × 0.8″ × 0.1″ (13 × 20 × 3 mm)
  • Weight without header pins: 0.6 g (0.02 oz)
  • Operating voltage: 2.5 to 5.5 V
  • Supply current: 10 mA
  • Output format (I²C):
    • Accelerometer: one 12-bit reading (left-justified) per axis
    • Magnetometer: one 12-bit reading (right-justified) per axis
  • Sensitivity range (configurable):
    • Accelerometer: ±2, ±4, ±8, or ±16 g
    • Magnetometer: ±1.3, ±1.9, ±2.5, ±4.0, ±4.7, ±5.6, or ±8.1 gauss

Included components

An 8×1 strip of 0.1″ header pins and an 8×1 strip of 0.1″ right-angle header pins are included, as shown in the picture below. You can solder the header strip of your choice to the board for use with custom cables or solderless breadboards, or you can solder wires directly to the board itself for more compact installations.

 

 

 

Using the LSM303DLHC

Connections

A minimum of four connections are necessary to use the LSM303DLHC: VIN, GND, SCL, and SDA. VIN should be connected to a 2.5–5.5 V source, GND to 0 volts, and SCL and SDA should be connected to an I²C bus operating at the same logic level as VIN. (Alternatively, if you are using the board with a 3.3 V system, you can leave VIN disconnected and bypass the built-in regulator by connecting 3.3 V directly to VDD.)

Pinout

PIN

Description

VDD

Regulated 3.3 V output. Almost 150 mA is available to power external components. (If you want to bypass the internal regulator, you can instead use this pin as a 3.3 V input with VIN disconnected.)

VIN

This is the main 2.5 V to 5.5 V power supply connection. The SCL/SPC and SDA/SDI level shifters pull the I²C and SPI bus high bits up to this level.

GND

The ground (0 V) connection for your power supply. Your I²C or SPI control source must also share a common ground with this board.

SDA/SDI/SDO

Level-shifted I²C data line and SPI data in line (also doubles as SDO in 3-wire mode): HIGH is VIN, LOW is 0 V

SCL/SPC

Level-shifted I²C/SPI clock line: HIGH is VIN, LOW is 0 V

SDO/SA0

SPI data out line in 4-wire mode: HIGH is VDD, LOW is 0 V. This output is not level-shifted. Also used as an input to determine I²C slave address (see below).

CS

SPI enable (chip select). Pulled up to VDD to enable I²C communication by default; drive low to begin SPI communication.

INT2

Programmable interrupt, a 3.3-V-logic-level output. This output is not level-shifted.

INT1

Programmable interrupt, a 3.3-V-logic-level output. This output is not level-shifted.

I²C Communication

The LSM303DLHC readings can be queried and the device can be configured through the I²C bus. The module acts as two chained I²C slave devices, with the accelerometer and magnetometer clock and data lines tied together to the same I²C bus to ease communication. Additionally, level shifters on the I²C clock (SCL) and data lines (SDA) enable I²C communication with microcontrollers operating at the same voltage as VIN (2.5–5.5V). A detailed explanation of the protocol can be found in the LSM303DLHC datasheet (629k pdf), and more detailed information about I²C in general can be found in NXP’s I²C-bus specification (371k pdf).

The accelerometer and the magnetometer have separate 7-bit slave addresses on the I²C bus. The magnetometer’s slave address is fixed to 0011110b and the accelerometer’s slave address is fixed to 0011001b.

In our tests of the board, we were able to communicate with the chip at clock frequencies up to 400 kHz; higher frequencies might work but were not tested. The chip itself and carrier board do not meet of some requirements to make the device compliant with I²C fast-mode. It is missing 50 ns spike suppression on the clock and data lines, and additional pull-ups on the clock and data lines might also be necessary to achieve compliant signal timing characteristics.

Sample Code

  • Arduino: We have written a basic Arduino library for this LSM303 carrier board that makes it easy to interface this sensor with an Arduino. The library makes it simple to read the raw accelerometer and magnetometer data, and it has a function for computing the tilt-compensated heading for those looking to use this sensor as a tilt-compensated compass.
  • mbed: There is a library for using the similar LSM303DLH with the ARM mbed development board. This library was not written and is not maintained by Pololu, and it needs to be modified slightly to work with the LSM303DLHC.

Protocol Hints

The datasheet provides all the information you need to use this sensor, but picking out the important details can take some time. Here are some pointers for communicating with and configuring the LSM303DLHC that we hope will get you up and running a little bit faster:

  • The magnetometer and accelerometer are off by default. You have to turn them on by setting the correct configuration registers.
  • The magnetometer will not update its data until all 6 data bytes have been read during a single I²C transfer. All the bytes can be read in the same transfer using the magnetometer’s automatic subaddress updating feature (this feature is enabled by default).
  • The accelerometer also has an automatic subaddress updating feature, if you assert the most significant bit of the subaddress. The accelerometer does not require you to read all of the output bytes before updating by default.
  • The accelerometer and magnetometer combined in this IC originate from different manufacturers, so there are fairly significant differences in their features, functionality, and interfaces.
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