This DTC indicates a functional failure of the temperature and humidity sensing module in the PM2 — Qin Plus
This DTC indicates a functional failure of the temperature and humidity sensing module in the PM2.5 air quality rapid detection system.
This module integrates into the PM2.5 detector and monitors ambient air temperature and relative humidity in real time.
The system uses these readings to compensate and correct the light-scattering measurement data from the laser particulate sensor, as temperature and humidity changes significantly affect PM2.5 detection accuracy.
An abnormal analog signal or digital communication interruption causes this fault.
This prevents the air conditioning controller from obtaining accurate ambient temperature and humidity parameters, disabling the automatic air purification, negative ion generator linkage, and air quality display functions.
Although the system classifies this as a "severe" fault, it only affects comfort features and does not impact the powertrain or driving safety.
The vehicle can travel a short distance to a repair facility.
- 1Physical damage to the temperature and humidity sensor element: an internal NTC thermistor open/short circuit or humidity-sensing capacitor failure causes the output signal to fall outside the valid 0.5-4.5V range.
- 2Poor wiring harness connector contact: The sensor plug located in the center of the dashboard or air conditioning intake housing is loose, has backed-out pins, or has oxidized terminals, causing intermittent signal interruption.
- 3Power supply circuit fault: Damaged sensor 5V reference voltage module or excessive ground circuit resistance (>1Ω) causing unstable sensor operating voltage.
- 4Condensation entering the module: The PM2.5 detector mounts near the air conditioning evaporator housing. Prolonged low temperatures produce condensation, corroding the temperature and humidity module PCB.
- 5Sensor calibration data lost: Failure to perform the temperature and humidity sensor zero-point calibration after replacing the air conditioning controller or PM2.5 module causes the ECU to invalidate the signal.
- 1Use the VDS2000/VDS3000 diagnostic tool to read all fault codes. Check for B110E09 and any accompanying B110A02 (CAN fault) or U-series communication faults. Record the ambient temperature value from the freeze frame data.
- 2Remove the center dashboard trim panel and locate the PM2.5 sensor (usually behind the A/C control panel or inside the center air vent). Check the wiring harness connector for looseness. Measure the voltage between plug pin 1 (power) and pin 3 (ground). Standard value: 5V±0.25V.
- 3Disconnect the connector and measure the resistance between the temperature and humidity sensor signal pin (pin 2) and ground: the temperature sensor should be 2–3 kΩ at 25°C (NTC characteristic), and the humidity sensor should be 200 Ω–20 kΩ, varying with humidity. If the resistance is infinite or close to 0 Ω, the sensor is faulty.
- 4If the power supply and sensor are normal, check wiring harness continuity: signal wire resistance between the PM2.5 sensor connector and the air conditioning controller (or BMS/thermal management controller, depending on vehicle configuration) must be <1Ω, and insulation resistance to body ground must be >10MΩ.
- 5Replace the PM2.5 detector assembly (the temperature and humidity module is generally unavailable as a separate spare part). After installation, calibrate the sensor: use the diagnostic tool to navigate to 'Air Conditioning System - Special Functions - PM2.5 Sensor Calibration'. Follow the prompts to complete the temperature and humidity zero-point calibration, clear the fault code, and perform a road test to verify the repair.
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