Adafruit GPIO Expander Bonnet - 16 Additional I/O over I2C

AdafruitSKU: ADA4132
Price:
Sale price £9.60
incl. VAT
excl. VAT
Stock:
Only 6 units left
Quantity:

Compatible with:

Awesome Extras

Raspberry Pi 4 Model B - The Pi HutRaspberry Pi 4 Model B - The Pi Hut
Raspberry PiRaspberry Pi 4 Model B
Sale priceFrom £33.30 incl. VAT excl. VAT
STEMMA QT / Qwiic Compatible JST-SH 4-Pin Cable (50mm) - The Pi HutSTEMMA QT / Qwiic Compatible JST-SH 4-Pin Cable (50mm) - The Pi Hut
Raspberry Pi Zero 2 - The Pi HutRaspberry Pi Zero 2 - The Pi Hut
Raspberry PiRaspberry Pi Zero 2 W
Sale priceFrom £14.40 incl. VAT excl. VAT

The Raspberry Pi is an amazing single board computer - and one of the best parts is that GPIO connector! 40 pins of digital goodness you can twiddle to control LEDs, sensors, buttons, radios, displays - just about any device you can imagine. This Adafruit GPIO Expander Bonnet will give you even more digital deliciousness - 16 more digital input/output pins are yours for any desire you have. The outputs are grouped into two 16-pin connectors that have a matching ground pin. You can set each pin to be a digital output (high or low) or as an input, with an internal pull-up if you like!

Simply pop the Bonnet on top of your Pi, the circuitry connects to the SDA/SCL I2C pins for control. The MCP23017 chip converts our Python commands to pin instructions.

When used as an output, each pin can supply up to 20mA (current clamped) - so you can drive LEDs directly. The datasheet recommends you keep the total current draw to under 125mA for the whole chip. We set up the expander chip for 5V logic by default (the I2C is level shifted so that's 3V logic). We did that so you can drive white, blue or green LEDs that sometimes aren't too happy with 3.3V logic. Or, you can cut/solder a jumper to change it to 3.3V logic.

When used as an input, you can set up a pull-up resistor so buttons and switches don't need extra resistors - just wire the pin to one side and ground to the other! There's interrupt capabilities on the chip, and two IRQ pins (INTA and INTB) you can solder a wire to, if you want to have a quick way of telling if any of the GPIO's changed.

By soldering close the address select jumpers, you can change the address from 0x20 up to 0x27. So, if you wanted to, you could have up to 8 bonnets for 128 total GPIO.

Comes as an assembled and tested Bonnet with two pre-soldered 16-pin IDC socket headers and a slim 2x20 header connector on the bottom. Follow our guide to use our CircuitPython library with Python 3 for fast and easy setup and configuration, you'll be running in under 5 minutes.

Works with any Raspberry Pi computer, including the original Pi 1, B+, Pi 2, Pi 3, Pi 4, Pi 5, and Pi Zero.

Note: The Raspberry Pi Zero is NOT included

Revision History

  • As of November 24, 2023 - We've added an on-board Stemma QT port for easy plug-n-play of I2C sensors and devices. The board also now comes with the two IDC socket headers pre-soldered. Lastly, we've also updated it with Adafruit Pinguin to make a lovely and legible silkscreen

Specifications

  • Dimensions: 65.0mm x 30.6mm x 5.6mm
  • Weight: 10.4g

Resources

Payment & Accreditations

Payment methods
Visa Mastercard Maestro PayPal Amazon Klarna

Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.

Accreditations