IoT & LoRa

3 products


  • iLabs LoRa Antenna (EU868)

    iLabs iLabs LoRa Antenna (EU868)

    This is a 170 mm long 868 MHz 50 hm antenna kit targeted for use with iLabs Challenger LoRa products. The antenna can tilt and swivel making it easy to install it in various applications. The kit also comes with a RF cable assembly containing an SMA (Female) and JK-IPEX/MHF/U.FL for connection to the PCB. The coax is a 1-13 mm 50 Ohm cable and is 100 mm’s long.

    € 7,95

    Members € 7,16

  • iLabs Challenger RP2040 LoRa (EU868)

    iLabs iLabs Challenger RP2040 LoRa (EU868)

    The Challenger RP2040 LoRa is an Arduino/CircuitPython compatible Adafruit Feather format microcontroller board based on the Raspberry Pi Pico (RP2040) chip.The transceiver features a LoRa long range modem that provides ultra-long range spread spectrum communication and high interference immunity whilst minimizing current consumption.LoRaThe integrated module LoRa module (RFM95W) can achieve a sensitivity of over -148 dBm utilizing a low cost crystal and bill of materials. The high sensitivity combined with the integrated +20 dBm power amplifier yields industry leading link budget making it optimal for any application requiring range or robustness. LoRa also provides significant advantages in both blocking and selectivity over conventional modulation techniques, solving the traditional design compromise between range, interference immunity and energy consumption.The RFM95W is connected to the RP2040 via SPI channel 1 and a few GPIO’s that is required for signaling. A U.FL connector is used to attach your LoRa antenna to the board. 168 dB maximum link budget +20 dBm – 100 mW constant RF output vs. V supply +14 dBm high efficiency PA Programmable bit rate up to 300 kbps High sensitivity: down to -148 dBm Bullet-proof front end: IIP3 = -12.5 dBm Excellent blocking immunity Low RX current of 10.3 mA, 200 nA register retention Fully integrated synthesizer with a resolution of 61 Hz FSK, GFSK, MSK, GMSK, LoRaTM and OOK modulation Built-in bit synchronizer for clock recovery Preamble detection 127 dB Dynamic Range RSSI Automatic RF Sense and CAD with ultra-fast AFC Packet engine up to 256 bytes with CRC Specifications Microcontroller RP2040 from Raspberry Pi (133 MHz dual-core Cortex-M0) SPI Two SPI channels configured (second SPI connected to RFM95W) I²C One I²C channel configured UART One UART channel configured Analog inputs 4 analog input channels Radio module RFM95W from Hope RF Flash memory 8 MB, 133 MHz SRAM memory 264 KB (divided into 6 banks) USB 2.0 controller Up to 12 MBit/s full speed (integrated USB 1.1 PHY) JST Battery connector 2.0 mm pitch On board LiPo charger 450 mA standard charge current Dimensions 51 x 23 x 3,2 mm Weight 9 g Downloads Datasheet Design files

    € 24,95

    Members € 22,46

  •  -22% iLabs Challenger RP2040 NFC

    iLabs iLabs Challenger RP2040 NFC

    The Challenger RP2040 NFC is a small embedded computer, equipped with an advanced on-board NFC controller (NXP PN7150), in the popular Adafruit Feather form factor. It is based on an RP2040 microcontroller chip from the Raspberry Pi Foundation which is a dual-core Cortex-M0 that can run on a clock up to 133 MHz. NFC The PN7150 is a full featured NFC controller solution with integrated firmware and NCI interface designed for contactless communication at 13.56 MHz. It is fully compatible with NFC forum requirements and is greatly designed based on learnings from previous NXP NFC device generation. It is the ideal solution for rapidly integrating NFC technology in any application, especially small embedded systems reducing Bill of Material (BOM). The integrated design with full NFC forum compliancy gives the user all the following features: Embedded NFC firmware providing all NFC protocols as pre-integrated feature. Direct connection to the main host or microcontroller, by I²C-bus physical and NCI protocol. Ultra-low power consumption in polling loop mode. Highly efficient integrated power management unit (PMU) allowing direct supply from a battery. Specifications Microcontroller RP2040 from Raspberry Pi (133 MHz dual-core Cortex-M0) SPI One SPI channels configured I²C Two I²C channel configured (dedicated I²C for the PN7150) UART One UART channel configured Analog inputs 4 analog input channels NFC module PN7150 from NXP Flash memory 8 MB, 133 MHz SRAM memory 264 KB (divided into 6 banks) USB 2.0 controller Up to 12 MBit/s full speed (integrated USB 1.1 PHY) JST Battery connector 2.0 mm pitch On board LiPo charger 450 mA standard charge current Dimensions 51 x 23 x 3,2 mm Weight 9 g Note: Antenna is not included. Downloads Datasheet Quick start example

    € 22,95€ 17,95

    Members identical

What is the Internet of Things (IoT)?

The Internet of Things, or IoT, is a system of interconnected computing devices, physical objects with sensors, processing power, software, and other technologies that have unique identifiers (UID). The IoT network deals with communication between machines, device identification, and communication. Therefore, choosing the best wireless network based on the IoT specifications is essential.

IoT devices can transfer data over a network without the need for human-to-human or human-to-computer interaction. As a result, users may experience difficulties with security, integration, process capability, scalability, and accessibility. Solving these problems requires a smart approach to IoT device management.

What are LoRa and LoRaWAN?

LoRa enables transmissions over very long distances (more than 10 km in rural areas) with low power consumption. It is a widely used technology for IoT networks worldwide. Thanks to LoRa technology, we can solve some of the world's biggest problems: energy management, natural resource reduction, environmental protection, infrastructure efficiency, disaster relief, and more.

However, the low bandwidth of LoRa cannot be used for just any application. Due to limitations in the frequency range it uses, the protocol is unable to transmit continuously.

LoRaWAN is a low-power, wide area networking protocol built on LoRa radio modulation technology. It connects devices wirelessly to the Internet and manages communications between end-node devices and network gateways. Thus, LoRaWAN defines the communication protocol and system architecture for the network, while the physical layer of LoRa enables the long-distance communication link, with the help of the gateway.

The gateway helps to realize transmission from an electrical device to the cloud, especially in environments where other types of networks are not usable due to technical limitations.

What can you do with LoRa technology? What does Elektor offer? What accessories are there?

LoRa is an excellent choice for indoor use in a broad spectrum of applications, including smart cities, buildings, agriculture, metering, healthcare, and logistics. It is safe, bidirectional, low-power, and has a long range.

Accessories help users optimize their IoT setups. Elektor offers a wide choice of components, including gateways, RFID readers, IoT shields, and different types of sensors (e.g. temperature, position, and humidity) to meet the diverse needs of a wide range of customers.

The future of LoRa

LoRa will help reduce the costs of creating IoT solutions and enable large-scale IoT applications. It is expected to play a key role as a communications network. For example, we expect it to be used for a wide range of applications, such as numerous smart lighting systems, hydropower usage tracking, and industrial data monitoring and analysis.

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