| Literature DB >> 26307994 |
Juan Aponte Luis1, Juan Antonio Gómez Galán2, Javier Alcina Espigado3.
Abstract
A novel sensing device for fire detection in domestic environments is presented. The fire detector uses a combination of several sensors that not only detect smoke, but discriminate between different types of smoke. This feature avoids false alarms and warns of different situations. Power consumption is optimized both in terms of hardware and software, providing a high degree of autonomy of almost five years. Data gathered from the device are transmitted through a wireless communication to a base station. The low cost and compact design provides wide application prospects.Entities:
Keywords: fire detector; low power consumption; smoke sensor; wireless sensor network
Year: 2015 PMID: 26307994 PMCID: PMC4570444 DOI: 10.3390/s150820717
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Building blocks of the sensing node.
Figure 2Chamber of the smoke sensor.
Figure 3Signal-conditioning interface of the smoke sensor.
Figure 4Scheme of the CO sensor.
Figure 5Main board of the fire sensing device. (a) Top; (b) Bottom.
Figure 6Electromagnetic shield for radio module.
Figure 7Secondary board. (a) Top; (b) Bottom.
Figure 8(a) Scheme of capacitive sensor for the touch pad; (b) Schematic circuit for the buzzer.
Figure 9Package design.
Figure 10Detail of the fabrication of the entire wireless smoke system.
Correction factor against installation.
| Room Installation | Smoke (KS) | Temperature (KT) | CO (KC) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kitchen | Low | Low | Low |
| Hall | High | High | High |
| Diving Room | Mid | Low | High |
| Bedrooms | Mid | High | High |
| Children Room | Mid | High | High |
| Car park | Low | High | Low |
Figure 11Flow chart of the detection process.
Figure 12Fire detection.
Figure 13Water vapor detection.
Figure 14Mobile application.