

🌿 Breathe Smarter, Code Faster — Your Air Quality Ally!
The AZDelivery MQ-135 sensor module is a compact, energy-efficient air quality detector compatible with Arduino and Raspberry Pi. It accurately measures multiple harmful gases with a fast response time, making it ideal for smart building and office air monitoring. Included is a comprehensive E-Book to streamline setup and coding, empowering professionals and makers to build next-level environmental sensing projects.










| ASIN | B07CNR9K8P |
| Batteries Required? | No |
| Batteries included? | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | 40,675 in DIY & Tools ( See Top 100 in DIY & Tools ) 22 in Gas Detectors |
| Colour | Blue |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (503) |
| Date First Available | 26 April 2018 |
| Item Package Quantity | 1 |
| Item Weight | 30 g |
| Manufacturer | AZDelivery |
| Manufacturer reference | 1x MQ-135 Capteur |
| Package Dimensions | 10.1 x 6 x 2.1 cm; 30 g |
| Part number | 1x MQ-135 Capteur |
| Power source type | Battery Powered |
| Size | 1x Gas Sensor |
| Style | Compact |
P**B
Grrreat!
These work weii and within spec.
C**E
Plug and play
Only used the analogue output but output to arduino and read the value. Simple 5v supply but seem to work ok on 3.3v too Calibration is still a work in progress
S**Y
Works just fine, soldering might do better
The soldering was a tad bit loose & needed constant adjusting to get any output from the sensor itself. But worked fine after a bit of fiddling around
W**E
Works
Can print pretty graphs using this sensor as an input.
D**N
Broad spectrum detector, not specific but not all-inclusive
It’s a bit vague what this actually detects (although the datasheet lists all the different gasses/vapours), it’s not just organic molecules, it’s not just acidic gases or alkaline gasses, it’s just kind of a weird mix of unrelated things. I would say this is a great cheap sensor for VOCs (e.g. in a workshop) but the fact it picks up atmospheric CO2 and NOx too makes it kind of pointless. It just tells you there’s some amount of atmosphere around. If you used this in only a controlled environment where no more than one detectable gas could be present, then it’s great…but no one buying a cheap sensor has that use-case. So, it’s fun to play with and see that numbers go up when you use alcohol/paint/ammonia/breathe nearby, but for the home-gamer that’s about it.
I**N
Tolerance between devices too great
After testing and leaving these devices to 'settle down', the readings between the devices whilst located next to each other vary so much that I just can't rely on them, they also fluctuate quite a bit which was a surprise too. I've literally got two of these side by side and one is nearly (!) double the value (analogue) to the other (swapped ports to confirm it wasn't my MCU). I can calibrate these which I may do (or get a different supplier in the hope they are more aligned), but not a great initial impression. I did test with some chemicals nearby and they did react very quickly, hence the 3 stars.
G**E
Fun for a project, but not quantitative and certainly not a replacement for a real CO2 monitor.
I bought this sensor to pair with an Arduino Uno to make a CO2 gas detector with the goal of getting CO2 concentration in ppm. The sensor picks up various gases, the datasheet quotes ammonia, various nitrogen-oxygen molecules, CO2, and a few others, so initially I was sceptical about it actually differentiating what it was picking up (and it cannot do this). However, given that CO2 is far more abundant in the atmosphere than the other things this sensor can detect, I thought that it would be worth a go (there are a few online articles covering how to do this that are worth reading if this is your aim). Out of the box, it's useless for CO2 quantification. The datasheet (easily available if you Google MQ-135 datasheet) says that the load resistor (for reference, that is the central one of the three SMD resistors you can see on the back of the module) should be between 10 and 47k ohms. The one on this module as shipped is 1k. Therefore, if you want this to work as it should, you ought to check the datasheet and will probably need to replace the load resistor. I bought a set of cheap SMD resistors off Amazon (0805) and mounted a 22k ohm resistor (required desoldering the factory one and attaching the new one). The result seems fairly convincing, I get 420ish ppm CO2 outside, which is approx what you'd expect. I will test this further at work against lab instruments over a range of CO2 concentrations just to see how well it holds up and will update this if I remember. Breathing out on the sensor causes a fairly modest spike in CO2 that is considerably lower than I'd expect (a quick Google tells me that CO2 in exhaled breath is ~38,000 ppm), but this could be a) because the sensor is calibrated over a much lower concentration or b) because the sensor isn't designed for CO2 concentrations that high (datasheet doesn't actually say as far as I can see). UPDATE: tried this today in a meeting held with 10 people in a seminar room vs a reference CO2 monitor (this thing: Carbon Dioxide Detector Temperature RH Humidity Indoor Air Quality Wall Mountable CO2 Monitor). The reference monitor was fairly consistent at ~500 ppm over the course of an hour (guess there's decent air circulation in there). Initially the MQ-135 was pretty close, and spent ~5 mins within 5 ppm of the reference. However, the MQ-135 measured ppm dropped and stabilized at around ~440 ppm after approx 10 mins - probably coinciding with the sensor heating up. This value is about 20 ppm higher than it typically reads in a well ventilated room but plotting the ref values against the MQ-135 shows no relationship, the MQ-135 doesn't track the small variations the reference detector showed effectively, even if calibrated and with a replacement load resistor. Bluntly put, it's a crude detector that isn't designed to be quantitative. You can get it to read ~420 ppm CO2, but that's only because you're telling it that that's the atmospheric CO2 concentration, it will not effectively track changes. If you want an accurate reading for CO2 concentration, try an NDIR sensor. Was fun to mess around with though.
R**E
Wat de sensor precies meet is niet helemaal duidelijk, omdat hij één waarde weergeeft, maar gevoelig is voor meerdere gassen, waaronder CO2. Als grove indicatie is hij echter gevoelig genoeg om verschillen in gasconcentraties te meten. Zo gebruikte ik hem om het fermentatieproces van wijn te volgen, door de sensor boven het waterslot van een gistingsvat te hangen. Eerst de concentratie in de omgeving gemeten, die leverde een waarde op van ongeveer 250ppm. Boven het waterslot schoot de waarde omhoog naar zo'n 450ppm. De waarde daalde geleidelijk naarmate het gistingsproces op zijn eind liep. Ik heb de waarde uitgelezen met een NodeMCU module (een 8266 model) en via een simpel scriptje naar mijn Domoticz smarthome systeem gestuurd. Volledige beschrijving volgt nog wel op mijn website Robothuis, als ik er de tijd voor vind.
K**T
Der Sensor reagiert auf verschiedene Gase (Ammoniak (NH₃), Alkohol, Benzol, Rauch, Kohlendioxid (CO₂), Stickoxide (NOx), Rauch etc.), aber er liefert nur einen Analogwert. Folglich kann man nicht genau bestimmen, worauf er im Detail reagiert. Wichtig auch vor der ersten Verwendung die "Einbrennzeit" von 24-48 Stunden zu beachten - die Werte sind ansonsten nicht reproduzierbar. Auch zu beachten: er zieht relativ viel Strom für sein Heizelement - je nachdem sind separate 5V notwendig. Ausserdem: nach dem Einschalten braucht er einige Zeit (etwa 10 Minuten) bis er halbwegs zuverlässige Werte liefert. Er ist also in der Handhabung etwas schwierig, aber dennoch ein guter Sensor um kritische Änderungen der Luftqualität zu überwachen. Recht nützlich : die Library MQUnifiedsensor. Da der Sensor genau tut was er soll (und qualitativ gut verarbeitet scheint), muss ich die volle Punktzahl geben.
A**O
Ottimo per rilevare più gas in ambiente , usato personalmente dentro involucro stampato con stampante 3d per realizzare un sensore ambientale che mi avvisasse in caso di fughe di gas o più in generale per rilevare la qualità dell’aria . Valido per molteplici usi, ci sono diversi programmi con Arduino che si possono scaricare e consentono di avere un buon rilevatore impiegando questo tipo di sensore . Lo consiglio .
A**B
They should use better package. Dont know whether it affects the way it operates.
R**U
Pour détection co2 et fumée avec arduino . Impeccable , fait le job.
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