I2C is a 2-wire protocol for communicating with simple sensors and devices, meaning it uses two connections for transmitting and receiving data. There are many I2C devices available and they're really easy to use with CircuitPython. We have libraries available for many I2C devices in the library bundle. (If you don't see the sensor you're looking for, keep checking back, more are being written all the time!)

In this section, we're going to do is learn how to scan the I2C bus for all connected devices. Then we're going to learn how to interact with an I2C device.

We'll be using the Adafruit TSL2591, a common, low-cost light sensor. While the exact code we're running is specific to the TSL2591 the overall process is the same for just about any I2C sensor or device.

These examples will use the TSL2591 lux sensor breakout. The first thing you'll want to do is get the sensor connected so your board has I2C to talk to.

Wire It Up

You'll need a couple of things to connect the TSL2591 to your board. The TSL2591 comes with STEMMA QT / QWIIC connectors on it, which makes it super simple to wire it up. No further soldering required!

For Gemma M0, Circuit Playground Express and Circuit Playground Bluefruit, you can use use the STEMMA QT to alligator clips cable to connect to the TSL2591.

For Trinket M0, Feather M0 and M4 Express, Metro M0 and M4 Express and ItsyBitsy M0 and M4 Express, you'll need a breadboard and STEMMA QT to male jumper wires cable to connect to the TSL2591.

For QT Py M0, you'll need a STEMMA QT cable to connect to the TSL2591.

We've included diagrams show you how to connect the TSL2591 to your board. In these diagrams, the wire colors match the STEMMA QT cables and connect to the same pins on each board.

  • The black wire connects from GND on the TSL2591 to ground on your board.
  • The red wire connects from VIN on the TSL2591 to power on your board.
  • The yellow wire connects from SCL on the TSL2591 to SCL on your board.
  • The blue wire connects from SDA on the TSL2591 to SDA on your board.

Check out the list below for a diagram of your specific board!

Be aware that the Adafruit microcontroller boards do not have I2C pullup resistors built in! All of the Adafruit breakouts do, but if you're building your own board or using a non-Adafruit breakout, you must add 2.2K-10K ohm pullups on both SDA and SCL to the 3.3V.

Circuit Playground Express and Circuit Playground Bluefruit

 

  • Connect 3.3v on your CPX to 3.3v on your TSL2591.
  • Connect GND on your CPX to GND on your TSL2591.
  • Connect SCL/A4 on your CPX to SCL on your TSL2591.
  • Connect SDL/A5 on your CPX to SDA on your TSL2591.

Trinket M0

 

  • Connect USB on the Trinket to VIN on the TSL2591.
  • Connect Gnd on the Trinket to GND on the TSL2591.
  • Connect D2 on the Trinket to SCL on the TSL2591.
  • Connect D0 on the Trinket to SDA on the TSL2591.

Gemma M0

 

  • Connect 3vo on the Gemma to 3V on the TSL2591.
  • Connect GND on the Gemma to GND on the TSL2591.
  • Connect A1/D2 on the Gemma to SCL on the TSL2591.
  • Connect A2/D0 on the Gemma to SDA on the TSL2591.

QT Py M0

If using the STEMMA QT cable:

  • Connect the STEMMA QT cable from the connector on the QT Py to the connector on the TSL2591.

Alternatively, if using a breadboard:

  • Connect 3V on the QT Py to VIN on the TSL2591.
  • Connect GND on the QT Py to GND on the TSL2591.
  • Connect SCL on the QT Py to SCL on the TSL2591.
  • Connect SDA on the QT Py to SDA on the TSL2591.

Feather M0 Express and Feather M4 Express

 

  • Connect USB on the Feather to VIN on the TSL2591.
  • Connect GND on the Feather to GND on the TSL2591.
  • Connect SCL on the Feather to SCL on the TSL2591.
  • Connect SDA on the Feather to SDA on the TSL2591.

ItsyBitsy M0 Express and ItsyBitsy M4 Express

 

  • Connect USB on the ItsyBitsy to VIN on the TSL2591
  • Connect G on the ItsyBitsy to GND on the TSL2591.
  • Connect SCL on the ItsyBitsy to SCL on the TSL2591.
  • Connect SDA on the ItsyBitsy to SDA on the TSL2591.

Metro M0 Express and Metro M4 Express

 

  • Connect 5V on the Metro to VIN on the TSL2591.
  • Connect GND on the Metro to GND on the TSL2591.
  • Connect SCL on the Metro to SCL on the TSL2591.
  • Connect SDA on the Metro to SDA on the TSL2591.

Find Your Sensor

The first thing you'll want to do after getting the sensor wired up, is make sure it's wired correctly. We're going to do an I2C scan to see if the board is detected, and if it is, print out its I2C address.

In the example below, click the Download Project Bundle button below to download the necessary libraries and the code.py file in a zip file. Extract the contents of the zip file, open the directory CircuitPython_Essentials/CircuitPython_I2C_Scan/ and then click on the directory that matches the version of CircuitPython you're using and copy the contents of that directory to your CIRCUITPY drive.

Your CIRCUITPY drive should now look similar to the following image:

CIRCUITPY
# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2017 Limor Fried for Adafruit Industries
#
# SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT

"""CircuitPython I2C Device Address Scan"""
# If you run this and it seems to hang, try manually unlocking
# your I2C bus from the REPL with
#  >>> import board
#  >>> board.I2C().unlock()

import time
import board

# To use default I2C bus (most boards)
i2c = board.I2C()  # uses board.SCL and board.SDA
# i2c = board.STEMMA_I2C()  # For using the built-in STEMMA QT connector on a microcontroller

# To create I2C bus on specific pins
# import busio
# i2c = busio.I2C(board.SCL1, board.SDA1)  # QT Py RP2040 STEMMA connector
# i2c = busio.I2C(board.GP1, board.GP0)    # Pi Pico RP2040

while not i2c.try_lock():
    pass

try:
    while True:
        print(
            "I2C addresses found:",
            [hex(device_address) for device_address in i2c.scan()],
        )
        time.sleep(2)

finally:  # unlock the i2c bus when ctrl-c'ing out of the loop
    i2c.unlock()

First we create the i2c object, using board.I2C(). This convenience routine creates and saves a busio.I2C object using the default pins board.SCL and board.SDA. If the object has already been created, then the existing object is returned. No matter how many times you call board.I2C(), it will return the same object. This is called a singleton.

To be able to scan it, we need to lock the I2C down so the only thing accessing it is the code. So next we include a loop that waits until I2C is locked and then continues on to the scan function.

Last, we have the loop that runs the actual scan, i2c_scan(). Because I2C typically refers to addresses in hex form, we've included this bit of code that formats the results into hex format: [hex(device_address) for device_address in i2c.scan()].

Open the serial console to see the results! The code prints out an array of addresses. We've connected the TSL2591 which has a 7-bit I2C address of 0x29. The result for this sensor is I2C addresses found: ['0x29']. If no addresses are returned, refer back to the wiring diagrams to make sure you've wired up your sensor correctly.

I2C Sensor Data

Now we know for certain that our sensor is connected and ready to go. Let's find out how to get the data from our sensor!

Installing Project Code

To use with CircuitPython, you need to first install a few libraries, into the lib folder on your CIRCUITPY drive. Then you need to update code.py with the example script.

Thankfully, we can do this in one go. In the example below, click the Download Project Bundle button below to download the necessary libraries and the code.py file in a zip file. Extract the contents of the zip file, open the directory CircuitPython_Essentials/CircuitPython_I2C_TSL2591/ and then click on the directory that matches the version of CircuitPython you're using and copy the contents of that directory to your CIRCUITPY drive.

Your CIRCUITPY drive should now look similar to the following image:

CIRCUITPY
# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2017 Limor Fried for Adafruit Industries
#
# SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT

"""CircuitPython Essentials I2C sensor example using TSL2591"""
import time
import board
import adafruit_tsl2591

i2c = board.I2C()  # uses board.SCL and board.SDA
# i2c = board.STEMMA_I2C()  # For using the built-in STEMMA QT connector on a microcontroller

# Lock the I2C device before we try to scan
while not i2c.try_lock():
    pass
# Print the addresses found once
print("I2C addresses found:", [hex(device_address) for device_address in i2c.scan()])

# Unlock I2C now that we're done scanning.
i2c.unlock()

# Create library object on our I2C port
tsl2591 = adafruit_tsl2591.TSL2591(i2c)

# Use the object to print the sensor readings
while True:
    print("Lux:", tsl2591.lux)
    time.sleep(0.5)

This code begins the same way as the scan code. We've included the scan code so you have verification that your sensor is wired up correctly and is detected. It prints the address once. After the scan, we unlock I2C with i2c_unlock() so we can use the sensor for data.

We create our sensor object using the sensor library. We call it tsl2591 and provide it the i2c object.

Then we have a simple loop that prints out the lux reading using the sensor object we created. We add a time.sleep(1.0), so it only prints once per second. Connect to the serial console to see the results. Try shining a light on it to see the results change!

Where's my I2C?

On the SAMD21, SAMD51 and nRF52840, we have the flexibility of using a wide range of pins for I2C. On the nRF52840, any pin can be used for I2C! Some chips, like the ESP8266, require using bitbangio, but can also use any pins for I2C. There's some other chips that may have fixed I2C pin.  

The good news is you can use many but not all pins. Given the large number of SAMD boards we have, its impossible to guarantee anything other than the labeled 'SDA' and 'SCL'. So, if you want some other setup, or multiple I2C interfaces, how will you find those pins? Easy! We've written a handy script.

These are the results from an ItsyBitsy M0 Express. Your output may vary and it might be very long. For more details about I2C and SERCOMs, check out our detailed guide here.

In the example below, click the Download Project Bundle button below to download the necessary libraries and the code.py file in a zip file. Extract the contents of the zip file, open the directory CircuitPython_Essentials/I2C_Test_Script/ and then click on the directory that matches the version of CircuitPython you're using and copy the contents of that directory to your CIRCUITPY drive.

Your CIRCUITPY drive should now look similar to the following image:

CIRCUITPY
# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2018 Kattni Rembor for Adafruit Industries
#
# SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT

"""CircuitPython Essentials I2C possible pin-pair identifying script"""
import board
import busio
from microcontroller import Pin


def is_hardware_I2C(scl, sda):
    try:
        p = busio.I2C(scl, sda)
        p.deinit()
        return True
    except ValueError:
        return False
    except RuntimeError:
        return True


def get_unique_pins():
    exclude = ['NEOPIXEL', 'APA102_MOSI', 'APA102_SCK']
    pins = [pin for pin in [
        getattr(board, p) for p in dir(board) if p not in exclude]
            if isinstance(pin, Pin)]
    unique = []
    for p in pins:
        if p not in unique:
            unique.append(p)
    return unique


for scl_pin in get_unique_pins():
    for sda_pin in get_unique_pins():
        if scl_pin is sda_pin:
            continue
        if is_hardware_I2C(scl_pin, sda_pin):
            print("SCL pin:", scl_pin, "\t SDA pin:", sda_pin)

This guide was first published on Aug 02, 2019. It was last updated on Mar 19, 2024.

This page (CircuitPython I2C) was last updated on Mar 19, 2024.

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