That screenshot looks like a compact 4-layer automotive dongle-style PCB reference, and the main takeaway for your current project is its placement strategy, not its exact circuitry. Per the attachment-analysis workflow, the right way to use an uploaded image like this is to extract the visible architecture and relate it to your open design context rather than treat it in isolation
For your USB-C environmental sensor node, the useful ideas to borrow are:
Put the input connector and protection stage together near the board edge
Keep the MCU/module in a clean area with short power decoupling paths
Reserve a clear antenna keep-out at the board edge if you use a radio module
Keep the sensor away from local heat sources like the regulator and protection IC
Use the 4-layer structure as:
L1: signals/components
L2: solid GND
L3: 5 V / 3.3 V distribution
L4: secondary signals + local GND pour
What does not carry over well from that reference:
Automotive connector placement and 12 V protection assumptions
High-current/vehicle-interface routing priorities
OBD-style mechanical outline
So: yes, it is a good layout reference for floorplanning, especially connector-edge placement, RF keep-out discipline, and power-entry clustering. But for your project, I’d adapt it into a USB-C on one edge, protection + regulator immediately behind it, MCU near antenna edge, sensor thermally isolated layout.
If you want, I can next:
set your board to a 4-layer layout,
size it for a small consumer sensor node,
and define the placement/rule strategy for the current project.
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
Low-power consumer environmental sensor node powered from USB-C 5 V. Includes USB-C sink power entry with reverse polarity, OVP, UVLO, and OCP protection for 0.5 A to 3 A sources, 3.3 V regulation, an ultra-low-power Wi-Fi plus BLE MCU, and a digital temperature/humidity sensor connected over I2C. Intended as a schematic foundation for reliable PCB layout and manufacturing.
Properties
Properties describe core aspects of the project.
Pricing & Availability
Distributor
Qty 1
Arrow
$2.65–$3.62
Digi-Key
$3.59–$3.91
LCSC
$7.84–$7.88
Mouser
$5.79
TME
$3.75
Verical
$4.37–$4.67
Controls
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