I’ll keep this minimal: inspect the Pico 2 shield pins, select a simple I2C humidity sensor, add only its required decoupling and I2C pull-ups, wire it to the Pico 2’s 3V3/GND/I2C pins, then run review and fix any schematic issues.
The added sensor circuit is wired correctly. Review is now only flagging unused Pico header pins, so I’m tying the remaining Pico ground pins to GND and marking intentionally unused header pins as no-connect for this minimal shield.
Done — I added a minimal SHTC3 humidity/temperature sensor circuit for the Pico 2 shield: U2, 100 nF decoupling, and 10 kΩ I2C pull-ups on GPIO0/GPIO1. Power/GND/I2C wiring is complete, unused Pico shield pins are intentionally marked no-connect, and the ERC checks now report no unresolved issues.
Next step is PCB layout/placement if you want to continue.
Wirelessly connects nets on schematic. Used to organize schematics and separate functional blocks. To wirelessly connect net portals, give them same designator. #portal
General Purpose Thick Film Standard Power
and High-Power Chip Resistor
47 kOhms ±5% 0.125W, 1/8W Chip Resistor 0805 (2012 Metric) Automotive AEC-Q200 Thick Film
Features:
- RMCF – standard power ratings
- RMCP – high power ratings
- Nickel barrier terminations standard
- Power derating from 100% at 70ºC to zero at +155ºC
- RoHS compliant, REACH compliant, and halogen free
- AEC-Q200 compliant
This is the project template for the Raspberry Pi Pico 2, the latest addition and update to Pi Pico line up.
Raspberry pi pico 2 is equipped with the RP2350, a cutting-edge, high-performance microcontroller designed with enhanced security and versatility in mind. Every element of its design has been upgraded, from the advanced CPU cores to the innovative PIO (Programmable I/O) interfacing subsystem.
The Raspberry Pi Foundation has integrated a robust security architecture centered around Arm TrustZone for Cortex-M, ensuring data protection and integrity. Additionally, new low-power states and expanded package options broaden the range of applications, making the Pico 2 an ideal choice for diverse, power-sensitive projects.