The HC-SR04 ultrasonic sensor uses SONAR to determine the distance of an object just like the bats do. It offers excellent non-contact range detection with high accuracy and stable readings in an easy-to-use package from 2 cm to 400 cm or 1” to 13 feet.
The operation is not affected by sunlight or black material, although acoustically, soft materials like cloth can be difficult to detect. It comes complete with ultrasonic transmitter and receiver module.
You will need the following components −
Follow the circuit diagram and make the connections as shown in the image given below.
Open the Arduino IDE software on your computer. Coding in the Arduino language will control your circuit. Open a new sketch File by clicking New.
const int pingPin = 7; // Trigger Pin of Ultrasonic Sensor const int echoPin = 6; // Echo Pin of Ultrasonic Sensor void setup() { Serial.begin(9600); // Starting Serial Terminal } void loop() { long duration, inches, cm; pinMode(pingPin, OUTPUT); digitalWrite(pingPin, LOW); delayMicroseconds(2); digitalWrite(pingPin, HIGH); delayMicroseconds(10); digitalWrite(pingPin, LOW); pinMode(echoPin, INPUT); duration = pulseIn(echoPin, HIGH); inches = microsecondsToInches(duration); cm = microsecondsToCentimeters(duration); Serial.print(inches); Serial.print("in, "); Serial.print(cm); Serial.print("cm"); Serial.println(); delay(100); } long microsecondsToInches(long microseconds) { return microseconds / 74 / 2; } long microsecondsToCentimeters(long microseconds) { return microseconds / 29 / 2; }
The Ultrasonic sensor has four terminals - +5V, Trigger, Echo, and GND connected as follows −
In our program, we have displayed the distance measured by the sensor in inches and cm via the serial port.
You will see the distance measured by sensor in inches and cm on Arduino serial monitor.