
Arduino Nano Matter
Save 20%The Arduino Nano Matter stems from a partnership between Arduino and Silicon Labs® to make Matter®, one of the most popular IoT connectivity standards for smart home devices, accessible to all.
Overview
Nano Matter merges Arduino’s signature ease of use with with the powerful Silicon Labs® MGM240S, wrapping the best of two worlds into one of the smallest form factors currently on the market. Experimenting with Matter-compatible devices has never been easier!
With Nano Matter, makers – at all levels of expertise – can leverage the popular Matter IoT connectivity standard to build interactive solutions, upgrade previous Nano-based projects to fully function as smart home devices, and even experiment with protocols like Zigbee® and OpenThread.
Key benefits include:
- Matter-ready for quick prototyping, thanks to hardware support and a user-friendly software layer.
- Based on the MGM240SD22VNA from Silicon Labs, a 32-bit Arm® Cortex®-M33.
- Secure Vault™ technology: enjoy industry-leading, state-of-the art security from Silicon Labs against escalating IoT threats.
- Multiprotocol connectivity enables 802.15.4 (Thread) and Bluetooth® Low Energy
- Nano-family compact size and pinout.
- Debugging over USB via SWD interface: no external debugging probe needed!
- Low energy consumption, designed for battery powered IoT devices.
Need Help?
Check the Arduino Forum for questions about the Arduino Language or how to make your own Projects with Arduino. If you need any help with your product, please contact the official Arduino User Support through our Contact us page.
The Matter Color Light will be the only officially Matter-certified profile for the Nano Matter. Currently under certification.
Tech specs
Microprocessor | MGM240SD22VNA (32-bit Arm® Cortex®-M33 with DSP instruction and FPU) |
Connectivity | 802.15.4 (Thread), Bluetooth® Low Energy 5.3, Bluetooth® Mesh, Matter-ready Smart Home Connectivity |
Memory | 1536 kB Flash, 256 kB RAM |
USB Connector | USB-C® |
Security | Secure Vault™ High |
Debugging | Over USB |
UART | 2 |
I2C | 2 |
SPI | 2 |
Digital I/O | 22 |
Analog Inputs | 20 (12 bits resolution) |
DAC | 4 (8-12 bits resolution) |
PWM pins | 22 (A maximum of 5 pins simultaneously) |
External interrupts | Available within all Digital pins |
User Interface | On-board RGB LED, User pushbutton |
Circuit operating voltage | 3.3 V |
Input Voltage (VIN) | 5 V |
Source Current per I/O Pin | 40 mA |
Sink Current per I/O Pin | 28 mA |
Clock Speed | 78 MHz |
Antenna On-board | 2.4 GHz |
Dimensions | 18x45 mm |
Environmental Temperature | -40 °C to + 85 °C |
Conformities
Resources for Safety and Products
Manufacturer Information
The production information includes the address and related details of the product manufacturer.
Arduino S.r.l.
Via Andrea Appiani, 25
Monza, MB, IT, 20900
https://www.arduino.cc/
Responsible Person in the EU
An EU-based economic operator who ensures the product's compliance with the required regulations.
Arduino S.r.l.
Via Andrea Appiani, 25
Monza, MB, IT, 20900
Phone: +39 0113157477
Email: support@arduino.cc
Documentation
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We are excited to announce our team will be traveling to Amsterdam for The Things Conference on September 22nd-23rd, where Arduino will be among select exhibitors. The Things Conference is the world’s largest conference about LoRaWAN®, bringing together the industry’s major players contributing to this technology’s development in a two-day deep dive dedicated to making business operations smarter. This year’s edition will focus on the main topic of digital transformation – as seen through the lens of LoRaWAN®, of course! Connect with us at The Things Conference Don’t miss your chance to meet our experts in person at Amsterdam’s The Kromhouthal – a former marine engine factory now turned into a unique event venue. We’ll be showcasing some of our best LoRaWAN® products and solutions: The Portenta Vision Shield LoRa®, designed to boost Arduino Pro’s H7 module with the capability to run embedded computer vision applications, connect wirelessly via LoRa® to the Arduino Cloud (or third-party infrastructure), and activate systems upon the detection of sound events; The Portenta Max Carrier, which can augment Portenta H7 or X8 with LoRa® connectivity and transform existing Arduino Pro modules into single-board computers or reference designs that enable edge AI for high-performance industrial, building automation and robotics applications;The Arduino MKR WAN 1310, an entry-level option featuring the renowned versatility of the MKR family: a practical and cost-effective solution to add LoRa® connectivity to projects requiring low power;Last but not least, the newly launched WisGate Edge Lite 2 and WisGate Edge Pro: ready-to-use, industrial-grade gateways for LoRaWAN® connectivity powered by RAKwireless™. On September 22nd, the packed schedule of The Things Conference also includes a keynote by Sebastian Romero, Lead Interaction Designer & Creative Technologist at Arduino: “Predictive Maintenance with an Arduino-based