IoT LED Dimmer

Making a IoT LED dimmer that you can control via your PC, phone, tablet or any other device connected to the network is super simple, and I’m going to show you how.

I’m sharing my three channel LED dimmer that you can use to dim single RGB LED strip or dim three separate LED channels. I want to be able to control lights above my desk and also mix warm white and cool white strip to give me more flexibility over lighting while I’m working, taking pictures or watching movies.

This is going to be a very short and very simple project that if you follow steps below, you can build it in an hour (excluding lead time for components).



For this project you will need:

LED strip (RGB, or 1/2/3 single color LED strip)

NodeMCU (ESP8266 dev board)

Three N-Channel Power MOSFET

Three N-Channel Signal MOSFET

12V Power adapter for LED strip

Firmware

When it comes to writing the firmware for ESP8266, there are tons of options. To keep things simple and in effort to save time, in this example we’ll use Arduino since it has plenty of libraries, example code and it’s easy to understand if you are just trying to get your feet wet with custom hardware.

Let’s take a look at the whole Arduino sketch, and then just go over some lines that might be of interest to you. The code provided should be pretty much self-explanatory and also comments should come in handy.

At minimum, you should modify following lines to get our IoT dimmer connected to our WiFi.

// WiFi Configuration (hard-coded at the moment) static const char ssid[] = "__Your-WiFi-SSID__"; static const char password[] = "__Your-WiFi-Password-Here__"; // mDNS hostname for this device // You should be able to call http://dimmer.iot static const char dns_hostname[] = "dimmer";

I am not planning renaming my WiFi network or changing password on a daily basis so this is fine for me. (If you want, you can download Arduino libraries that allow you to set NodeMCU in station mode so you can connect to your device, configure which credentials you want it to use and then it will restart in client mode and try to connect to you WiFi access point.)

Also whatever you set as `dns_hostname` you should be able to connect to your IoT dimmer by typing in http://dns_hostname.iot, in my case that is http://dimmer.iot. It is more convenient than IP but this may or may not work for you, depending on your network config.

Arduino code is pretty “boring” and “nothing special” in code is happening, at least on the surface that is.

Sketch code is pretty self explanatory, set LED intensity, handle URL request, handle websocket request and that’s pretty much it so we won’t waste too much time on it.

Hardware

Download schematic PDF

ESP8266 board already comes with pretty much everything we need. We just need to add drivers for our LED strip. For that we are going to use N-channel power MOSFETs.

We expect that our LED strip is going to draw several amps of current, that means that we have to be careful with our LED driver so it doesn’t get too hot or burn. Power dissipated by a MOSFET can be calculated as

P=I2R DS_ON

P – Power dissipated by mosfet

I – Current through MOSFET (and also through LED strip)

R DS_ON – On resistance of a MOSFET (specified in datasheet)

Brightness of our LED strip will directly depend on current trough it. So to reduce power dissipated, we want to keep R DS_ON as low as possible. R DS_ON depends on voltage between Gate and Source (V GS ). So we want to select a MOSFET that has low R DS_ON and can handle voltage of our LED strip (12V).

See it in action

By opening your favorite web browser, you can either type the IP address of ESP8266, something like http://192.168.0.11, or you can type http://dimmer.local and it will try to find ESP8266 on your network. You will be greeted with a web page that we designed previously in Firmware section. That’s it, you can now control your LED strip(s) through your PC, mobile, tablet or any other device that has a web-browser capabilities. Also since we are using websockets, if you have more than one client connected to IoT dimmer, any change is immediately propagated to everyone.

Update: I’ve been using this IoT Dimmer for about three months now and I’m thrilled with how it works and performs. Also it’s a great conversation piece when I have guests over.

How to make it cool and work for you?

Controlling LEDs through your web browser, mobile, tablet and etc. is fun, but how can you make it even more cool? Here are few suggestions for improvements (some of which I’m using right now):

Automate it with Python

My Dimmer is controlling two channels of warm and cool white LEDs that sit right above my workbench. So I have a tiny Python script that runs in the background and if I’m watching a movie it will dim the lights. If I’m working on a project, it will increase brightness and if it’s late at night, cool white channel is slightly dimmed to reduce blue light.

My Dimmer is controlling two channels of warm and cool white LEDs that sit right above my workbench. So I have a tiny Python script that runs in the background and if I’m watching a movie it will dim the lights. If I’m working on a project, it will increase brightness and if it’s late at night, cool white channel is slightly dimmed to reduce blue light. Make it talk with Google Assistant / Alexa / _your-favourite-assistant -name_here

You have dimmer that sits on your local WiFi network and it’s using websockets to receive commands and sync clients. It is pretty straightforward to make your favorite home assistant talk with your dimmer so you can use your voice to control the lights.

You have dimmer that sits on your local WiFi network and it’s using websockets to receive commands and sync clients. It is pretty straightforward to make your favorite home assistant talk with your dimmer so you can use your voice to control the lights. Automate it with IFTT or your other favorite service

You can use IFTT (for example) to send commands to your dimmer based on your Android/iPhone location. Automate it based on time of day. Or pull data from another sensor (like ambient light sensor) and based on data turn LEDs on/off.

Source files

Schematic, manufacturing files and source-code can be found in my ESP-IoT-Dimmer GitHub repository.

Feedback

Please let me know what do you think? Did you find this project interesting and easy to make? Would you like to see more complex projects and if yes, what type?

If you made it, please share your results and don’t be shy, leave a comment below!