| Literature DB >> 35336279 |
Jeyeon Kim1, Daichi Minagawa2, Daiki Saito2, Shinichiro Hoshina1, Kazuya Kanda1.
Abstract
In recent years, environmental information monitoring in the agricultural field has become an important issue. There is an increasing demand for meteorological information in local areas such as a rice field, a greenhouse, etc., owned by an agricultural worker. Conventional research has been actively conducted on weather stations in local areas. However, weather stations that are inexpensive, highly accurate, and have achieved stable measurements indoors and outdoors for long periods of time (over a year) are not reported. In addition, there is a lack of research that simultaneously acquires weather information, stores weather information, and provides weather information to farmers. These three functions are important in the agricultural field. In this paper, we discuss the development of a meteorological observation device, the construction of a cloud server for storing meteorological information, and the provision of information to users. First, we develop the novel meteorological observation device (KOSEN-Weather Station), which applies a simple Aßmann's aspiration psychrometer for highly accurate temperature and humidity measurements. To evaluate the reliability of KOSEN-WS, we compare the weather information measured by KOSEN-WS with that of WXT520. As a result, it is shown that KOSEN-WS is viable. Then, KOSEN-WS is installed in the field, and the stability and durability of KOSEN-WS are examined. As a result, the KOSEN-WS has been operating stably over 19 months and provides weather information to users. Then, it is shown that the KOSEN-WS is able to operate continuously under the environment of -16.5 °C to 44.9 °C. Next, for the storage of meteorological information, we construct the cloud server. Then, a webpage is created to provide easy-to-understand weather information to farmers. Furthermore, to prevent damage to crops, if the current temperature is lower than the set temperature, or if the current temperature is higher than the set temperature, an alert is sent to the farmers. As a result, the system is highly evaluated by agricultural workers and JA staff. From the above results, the effectiveness of this system is shown.Entities:
Keywords: Aßmann’s aspiration psychrometer; WioLTE; agriculture ICT; alert notification; could server; weather station
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35336279 PMCID: PMC8950270 DOI: 10.3390/s22062108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Conventional research on power-saving and inexpensive weather stations is summarized by communication method, measurement period, and sensors used.
| Types of | Overview | Communication | Ref | Measurement | Sensors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Raspberry Pi | The Raspberry Pi plays the role of sensor measurement and gateway; the Raspberry Pi transmits the measured data to the server using 3G/4G, WiFi, Zigbee, LoRa, etc. | 3G/4G | [ | x | Gas, IR, moisture |
| [ | x | Temperature, wind, liquid level | |||
| WiFi | [ | x | Soil moisture, humidity, acoustic, etc. | ||
| [ | x | Temperature, accelerometer, etc. | |||
| [ | x | Camera | |||
| Zigbee | [ | x | Soil moisture | ||
| LoRa | [ | x | Temperature, humidity, etc. | ||
| Arduino | The Arduino plays the role of sensor measurement and gateway. The Arduino transmits the measured data to the server using 3G/4G, WiFi, Zigbee, LoRa, etc. | 3G/4G | [ | x | Soil moisture, temperature, humidity |
| [ | 7 days | Temperature, soil temperature, rain, etc. | |||
| WiFi | [ | 3 months | Temperature, humidity, pH, soil moisture, etc. | ||
| [ | x | Temperature, humidity, soil moisture, etc. | |||
| [ | Less than a day | Temperature, rain, etc. | |||
| Zigbee | [ | x | Temperature, soil moisture, rain | ||
| [ | 2 days | Temperature, humidity, soil moisture | |||
| [ | x | Temperature, humidity, pH | |||
| LoRa | [ | 7 days | Temperature, soil moisture, etc. | ||
| [ | x | Temperature, humidity, soil moisture, etc. | |||
| [ | 1 day | Temperature, humidity, soil moisture, etc. | |||
| Raspberry Pi | The Arduino plays the role of sensor measurement and the Raspberry Pi plays the role of gateway. The data measured by the Arduino are transferred to the cloud server via the Raspberry Pi. | 3G/4G | [ | Less than a day | Temperature, humidity, soil moisture, etc. |
| WiFi | [ | Less than a day | Temperature, humidity, etc. | ||
| Zigbee | [ | x | Temperature, soil moisture | ||
| Wire | [ | Less than a day | Temperature, soil moisture, etc. | ||
| Various micro-computers | Various microcomputers act as measurement sensors and gateways. The microcontrollers will transmit the measured data to the server via 3G/4G, WiFi, SigFox, etc. | 3G/4G | [ | x | Temperature, anemometer, etc. |
| [ | x | Soil moisture | |||
| WiFi | [ | Less than a day | Temperature, humidity | ||
| SigFox | [ | x | Temperature, humidity, etc. | ||
| Bluetooth | [ | 1 day | Temperature, humidity, etc. |
Figure 1Overview of this system. The KOSEN-Weather Station transfers the weather data to a cloud server. Then, the cloud server accumulates meteorological data and provides agricultural workers with the necessary weather information.
Figure 2KOSEN-Weather Station configuration. KOSEN-WS consists of a sensor unit, a power supply, and a gateway.
Figure 3Temperature–humidity measuring device to which the simple Aßmann’s aspiration psychrometer is applied.
Figure 4Circuit diagram and circuit board for the sensor unit. (a) Circuit diagram. (b) Circuit board.
Figure 5KOSEN-WS installed in a place where no power supply can be secured and its interior. The KOSEN-WS uses a power controller for solar panel and battery.
Figure 6KOSEN-WS installed in a greenhouse with a commercial power supply and its interior. The KOSEN-WS was then installed at the growing point of the crop. The difference between the indoor KOSEN-WS and the outdoor KOSEN-WS (Figure 5) is that it uses a battery controller.
Figure 7Overview of cloud server. KOSEN-WS forwards the measured data to the web server. The transmitted weather data are then stored in the database server via the application (AP) server. The user can check the weather information by accessing the webpage when necessary.
Figure 8An example of a webpage for providing weather information to farmers. The default weather information to be displayed is temperature and humidity.
Figure 9Installation locations of the KOSEN-WS and WXT520. The heights of the two airflow meters are the same, and the distance between the two devices is approximately 4 m.
Figure 10Results from comparing the temperature data of the KOSEN-WS and WXT520. The two sets of data are almost identical. These results show that the KOSEN-WS is effective for temperature/humidity measurements.
Figure 11Results from comparing the humidity data of the KOSEN-WS and WXT520. It is difficult to use the humidity data because the difference between KOSEN-WS and the WXT520 is approximately 17% on average.
Figure 12Results of comparing the humidity data after correction. Subtracting 17% from the humidity data measured by KOSEN-WS shows that the difference is smaller. This indicates that the corrected humidity data are valid.
Figure 13Results from comparing the wind speed of the KOSEN-WS and WXT520. The overall trend is the same, but there is a difference between the two measurement results. The KOSEN-WS measures using a wind vane and anemometer-type system, whereas the WXT520 measures using an ultrasonic-type system.
Figure 14Results from comparing the rainfall data of the KOSEN-WS and WXT520. There is a large difference between the rainfall as measured by the KOSEN-WS and that measured by the WXT520. The KOSEN-WS uses an inexpensive tipping bucket rain gauge, which is not accurate.
Figure 15Results from comparing the solar radiation of the KOSEN-WS and WXT520. This shows that both sensors have almost the same results.
Figure 16Installation places of KOSEN-WS in Yamagata Prefecture. Yamagata Prefecture is located approximately 300 km north of Tokyo. It is hot in summer and cold in winter. In winter, a large amount of solar radiation is low, owing to the large amount of snow.
Operating time and operating range of KOSEN-WS when using commercial power.
| Operating Time * | Temperature [°C] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Start | Stop | Continuous Operation | Maximum | Minimum | |
| Mikawa | 3 August 2019 | Currently in operation | 19 months | +44.9 | −2.0 |
| Mikawa | 11 September 2019 | Currently in operation | 18 months | +44.8 | −2.4 |
| Mikawa | 2 August 2019 | 26/05/2020 | 9 months | +43.6 | −2.6 |
| Higashine | 27 May 2020 | Currently in operation | 10 months | +38.6 | −10.9 |
| Higashine | 7 December 2019 | Currently in operation | 15 months | +38.0 | −5.4 |
* The above measurement data were measured from August 2019 to March 2021.
Figure 17An example of the temperature data continuously measured for 19 months by the KOSEN-WS installed in Mikawa (greenhouse).
Operating time and operating range of KOSEN-WS when using solar panels and battery.
| Operating Time * | Temperature [℃] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Start | Stop | Continuous Operation | Maximum | Minimum | |
| Tsuruoka | 14 April 2020 | 18 October 2020 | 6 months | +41.3 | −1.9 |
| Tendo | 6 October 2020 | 5 January 2021 | 3 months | +39.8 | +1.1 |
| Nanyo | 12 November 2020 | currently | 4 months | +27.5 | −16.5 |
* The above measurement data were measured from August 2019 to March 2021.
Figure 18An example of temperature data measured by the KOSEN-WS installed in Nanyo.
Figure 19KOSEN-WS set up in Tsuruoka (outdoors) during winter. There is a significant amount of snow around the KOSEN-WS, but the KOSEN-WS is operating continuously.
Figure 20Webpage to provide weather information to farmers. (a) This figure is the default webpage. It shows the temperature and humidity, which are often checked by farmers. The highest and lowest values of the previous day and the current and lowest values of today are shown in numbers. To check other weather information, a user needs to click on a button (red dotted square), as shown in the figure. When a user clicks a button, the weather information corresponding to the button is displayed. To see the weather information of other KOSEN-WS, click on the blue dotted square and a list of KOSEN-WS will appear. (b) When clicking on the button of “solar radiation”, a graph of solar radiation will be added to the bottom of the webpage. In addition, other buttons can be clicked to add them to the bottom of the home page. Furthermore, when the user clicks on other buttons, weather information corresponding to the button will be added to the bottom of the webpage. (c) When clicking on the button of “one week”, this will present weather information for one week.
Figure 21An example of alert notification at high temperature. The alert notification is sent to farmers’ smartphones using LINE when the temperature is over 35 °C. The figure on the right shows an alert notification by LINE. The user needs to click “Yes” after the first alert notification is received. After the second alert notification, the user needs to click “Yes” again. The user must click “Yes” twice to stop the alert notification. If the user does not confirm twice, the alert notification will continue to arrive.