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Battery powered B-U585I-IOT02A

franksacco
Associate II

I'm building a simple application that collects environmental data from sensors (pressure, temperature and humidity) using the B-U585I-IOT02A development board. Since I want to deploy the node directly on the field, I'm planning to power the board using several AA batteries through the VIN pin.

In order to estimate the battery life, I tried to measure the power consumption of the chip only using JP3, and of the entire board with a source meter in VIN.

Regarding the consumption of the chip alone, I get an average of 2 mA, a value that seems consistent with what is stated in the manual. While for the whole board, I get about 170 mA on average with a 5 V supply. Also, I notice that the ST-LINK debugger remains unnecessarily powered.

Why is the total consumption of the board so high? What can I do to reduce the consumption and have a longer battery life?

 

Thanks in advance.

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions

The thing with development boards, as the name suggests, is that they're intended for use during development - not deploying to the field.

That's why they have things like ST-Link built in, which are great for development, but unnecessary - or even a disadvantage - in deployment.

If you're just looking for LoRaWAN, then I've had success with the B-L072Z-LRWAN1:

https://www.st.com/en/evaluation-tools/b-l072z-lrwan1.html

It did take some fighting to get the power consumption down:

https://community.st.com/t5/stm32-mcus-wireless/excess-current-consumption-running-b-l072z-lrwan1-from-battery/td-p/322961

For something more recent, you could try an STM32WL Nucleos:

https://www.st.com/en/evaluation-tools/nucleo-wl55jc.html

 

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6 REPLIES 6

@franksacco wrote:

 Since I want to deploy the node directly on the field,.


Not sure that board is intended for deploying to the field?

Perhaps look at SensorTile.box:

https://www.st.com/content/st_com/en/campaigns/sensortile_box.html

or similar?

Thanks for the reply.

In my case the MCU used is not so important. However, I'm comparing several environmental sensors, so I need the LPS22HH and HTS221 sensors on the board. In addition, the sensor node is composed of the B-U585I-IOT02A board with the X-NUCLEO IKS4A1 extension attached, 3 external sensors (via I2C) and an external LoRaWAN modem (via UART).

Do you have any suggestion regarding the development board to use?

The thing with development boards, as the name suggests, is that they're intended for use during development - not deploying to the field.

That's why they have things like ST-Link built in, which are great for development, but unnecessary - or even a disadvantage - in deployment.

If you're just looking for LoRaWAN, then I've had success with the B-L072Z-LRWAN1:

https://www.st.com/en/evaluation-tools/b-l072z-lrwan1.html

It did take some fighting to get the power consumption down:

https://community.st.com/t5/stm32-mcus-wireless/excess-current-consumption-running-b-l072z-lrwan1-from-battery/td-p/322961

For something more recent, you could try an STM32WL Nucleos:

https://www.st.com/en/evaluation-tools/nucleo-wl55jc.html

 

I agree with you when you say that some development boards are not intended for field use. However, I am building a prototype for a university research project and we do not have the skills or time to design a custom PCB board.

I think I will proceed with the following configuration: NUCLEO-WL55JC + X-NUCLEO-IKS01A3 (embedding LPS22HH and HTS221 sensor) + X-NUCLEO-IKS4A1 + 3 external sensors (connected via I2C).

Also, since I am using Rust and the Embassy framework, the platform change will be painless: I will only have to update some pins and clock management.

Thank you for your response and suggestions.

 

Note that on the B-U585I-IOT02A there is a WiFi chip (EMW3080) that may explain the power consumption.


@franksacco wrote:

I think I will proceed with the following configuration: NUCLEO-WL55JC + X-NUCLEO-IKS01A3 (embedding LPS22HH and HTS221 sensor) + X-NUCLEO-IKS4A1 + 3 external sensors (connected via I2C).

Also, since I am using Rust and the Embassy framework, the platform change will be painless: I will only have to update some pins and clock management.

Hello

When you have finished to implement this new hardware configuration with Rust + Embassy, could you come back to tell us if it was indeed easy and what problems you had, if any ? Thanks