A sophisticated, hackable, 32x24 pixel thermal camera breakout! Use it to monitor the temperature of your CPU or coffee pot, or to build your own heat-seeking night vision camera. Works with Raspberry Pi or Arduino.
It's perfect for building into projects - industrial, scientific, or just fun - and much more affordable than most thermal cameras. Our breakout makes it easy to use the camera with your Raspberry Pi or Arduino, using I2C and 3-6V supply. And it's available in two different fields of view, 55° (standard) or 110° (wide angle) depending on your preference.
The MLX90640 far-infrared camera is an array of 768 (32x24) thermal sensors that can detect temperatures from -40 to 300°C with approximately 1°C accuracy and up to 64FPS! The applications of this camera are manifold: measure the heat or heat dissipation of devices like CPUs, circuit boards, or electrical appliances; use it to identify thermal inefficiencies in your home; or use it for presence detection to identify bodies in complete darkness.
It's also compatible with our fancy newBreakout Garden, where using breakouts is as easy just popping it into one of the six slots and starting to grow your project, create, and code.
Check out our full range of Breakout's and Breakout Garden's here
-40 to 300°C detection with approximately 1°C accuracy
I2C interface (address 0x33)
3.3V or 5V compatible
Reverse polarity protection
Compatible with all models of Raspberry Pi, and with certain Arduino models
Kit includes
MLX90640 breakout
1x5 male header
1x5 female right-angle header
We've designed this breakout board so that you can solder on the piece of right-angle female header and pop it straight onto the bottom left 5 pins on your Raspberry Pi's GPIO header (pins 1, 3, 5, 7, 9).
Software
We've writtensoftware in Cthat you can use to generate images and video from the MLX90640 cameras.
Wide angle (110°) – MLX90640 Thermal Camera Breakout
Actually a quite interesting piece of gear once you get it working, the installation takes a bit of effort to say the least. This unit could use a proper control application for it (i.e. for setting the FLIR indicator colors etc), but then again, isn't the RPi altogether specifically for software&hardware tweakers in the first place? :)