| Literature DB >> 28287495 |
Eduardo Ferreira da Costa1, Nestor E de Oliveira2, Flávio J O Morais3,4, Pedro Carvalhaes-Dias5,6,7, Luis Fernando C Duarte8,9, Andreu Cabot10,11, J A Siqueira Dias12,13.
Abstract
We present here the design and fabrication of a self-powered and autonomous fringing field capacitive sensor to measure soil water content. The sensor is manufactured using a conventional printed circuit board and includes a porous ceramic. To read the sensor, we use a circuit that includes a 10 kHz triangle wave generator, an AC amplifier, a precision rectifier and a microcontroller. In terms of performance, the sensor's capacitance (measured in a laboratory prototype) increases up to 5% when the volumetric water content of the porous ceramic changed from 3% to 36%, resulting in a sensitivity of S = 15.5 pF per unity change. Repeatability tests for capacitance measurement showed that the θ v sensor's root mean square error is 0.13%. The average current consumption of the system (sensor and signal conditioning circuit) is less than 1.5 μ A, which demonstrates its suitability for being powered by energy harvesting systems. We developed a complete irrigation control system that integrates the sensor, an energy harvesting module composed of a microgenerator installed on the top of a micro sprinkler spinner, and a DC/DC converter circuit that charges a 1 F supercapacitor. The energy harvesting module operates only when the micro sprinkler spinner is irrigating the soil, and the supercapacitor is fully charged to 5 V in about 3 h during the first irrigation. After the first irrigation, with the supercap fully charged, the system can operate powered only by the supercapacitor for approximately 23 days, without any energy being harvested.Entities:
Keywords: autonomous sensors; capacitive soil water content sensor; energy harvesting; micro sprinkler spinner generator; soil water content sensors; ultra-low-power circuits
Year: 2017 PMID: 28287495 PMCID: PMC5375861 DOI: 10.3390/s17030575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1A diagram of the installation of the sensors in a crop field.
Figure 2Photograph of the PCB with interdigitated electrodes (top) and a porous ceramic plate (bottom).
Figure 3Photograph of the fabricated sensor.
Figure 4Schematic diagram of the signal conditioning circuit.
Figure 5and as a function of the time, for pF.
Figure 6Photograph of the DC microgenerator adapted on the top of a conventional micro sprinkler spinner.
Figure 7Schematic of the energy harvesting circuit.
Figure 8as a function of the capacitance.
Figure 9as a function of in the porous ceramic.
Figure 10Comparison of the measured capacitance with the calculated capacitance (as a function of ) of a sensor with two series capacitors, one with a constant value (75 pF) and one varying linearly with , from 460 pF to 1126 pF.
Figure 11in the porous ceramic, as a function of .
Figure 12Linear approximation of the sensitivity in three different regions.
Measured [mV] in the repeatability test.
| 14.6% | 18.4% | 20.7% | 25.7% | 28.0% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meas. # 1 | 1401.37 | 1416.99 | 1425.78 | 1437.50 | 1441.89 |
| Meas. # 2 | 1399.90 | 1416.50 | 1425.29 | 1436.52 | 1441.89 |
| Meas. # 3 | 1399.90 | 1416.99 | 1424.80 | 1437.01 | 1441.89 |
| Meas. # 4 | 1400.88 | 1417.97 | 1424.80 | 1437.99 | 1441.89 |
| Meas. # 5 | 1400.88 | 1417.48 | 1424.80 | 1437.50 | 1441.41 |
| Meas. # 6 | 1401.37 | 1416.99 | 1424.32 | 1438.48 | 1441.89 |
| Mean Value | 1400.72 | 1417.15 | 1424.97 | 1437.50 | 1441.81 |
| Standard Deviation ( | 0.54 | 0.38 | 0.38 | 0.49 | 0.14 |
Figure 13Power-up sequence in the energy harvesting circuit.