Enhance Your Tech Experience: Top Gadgets for Convenience and Performance
Enhance Your Tech Experience: Top Gadgets for Convenience and Performance Enhance Your Tech Experience: Top Gadgets for Convenience and Performance
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PN532 NFC/RFID controller breakout board

PN532 NFC/RFID controller breakout board

$ 73.06

$ 73.06

Unavailable
PN532 NFC/RFID controller breakout board

PN532 NFC/RFID controller breakout board

$ 73.06

$ 73.06

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Product Details

The PN532 is the most popular NFC chip, and is what is embedded in pretty much every phone or device that does NFC. It can pretty much do it all, such as read and write to tags and cards, communicate with phones (say for payment processing), and 'act' like a NFC tag. If you want to do any sort of embedded NFC work, this is the chip you'll want to use!

NFC (Near Field Communications) is a way for two devices very close to each other to communicate. Sort of like a very short range bluetooth that doesn't require authentication. It is an extension of RFID, so anything you can do with RFID you can do with NFC. You can do more stuff with NFC as well, such as communicate bi-directionally with cell phones

Because it can read and write tags, you can always just use this for RFID-tag projects. We carry a few different tags that work great with this chip. It can also work with any other NFC/RFID Type 1 thru 4 tag.

The PN532 is also very flexible, you can use 3.3V TTL UART at any baud rate, I2C or SPI to communicate with it. This chip is also strongly supported by , simply plug in an FTDI cable and use the FTDI serial port device to communicate - this lets you do NFC dev using any Linux/Mac/Windows computer! We also include onboard power LED, 3.3V regulator and an FTDI header so you can plug in an or and use with libnfc.

Comes with: the PN532 breakout board including a tuned 13.56MHz stripline antenna, 0.1" header, 2 jumpers/shunts and a 4050 level shifter chip. We also toss in a  13.56MHz 1K card! ()



Technical Details

  • 2" (51mm) x 4.7" (117.7mm) and 0.425" (1.1mm) thick.
  • This board/chip uses I2C 7-bit address 0x48

Revision History:

  • As of Oct 31, 2014 we updated the PCB design to allow the PN532 to enter low-power mode. The code, pinout, shape, etc are otherwise the same!


    Learn

    Add RFID/NFC read and write to your Pi in an hour!
    Radio Frequency ID and Near Field Communication using the PN532
    Identifying object via radio waves
    Make papercraft Minecraft blocks that interact with the world using near-field communication!

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