Design and Analysis of Power Efficient IoT Based Capacitive Sensor System to Measure Soil Moisture

Author(s):  
Siddhanta Borah ◽  
R. Kumar ◽  
Writtick Pakhira ◽  
Subhradip Mukherjee
2004 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 451-455 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.G. Stewart ◽  
W.H. Siew ◽  
L.C. Campbell ◽  
C. Ferguson

Author(s):  
Anne M. Smith

Remote sensing can provide timely and economical monitoring of large areas. It provides the ability to generate information on a variety of spatial and temporal scales. Generally, remote sensing is divided into passive and active depending on the sensor system. The majority of remote-sensing studies concerned with drought monitoring have involved visible–infrared sensor systems, which are passive and depend on the sun’s illumination. Radar (radio detection and ranging) is an active sensor system that transmits energy in the microwave region of the electromagnetic spectrum and measures the energy reflected back from the landscape target. The energy reflected back is called backscatter. The attraction of radar over visible– infrared remote sensing (chapters 5 and 6) is its independence from the sun, enabling day/night operations, as well as its ability to penetrate cloud and obtain data under most weather conditions. Thus, unlike visible–infrared sensors, radar offers the opportunity to acquire uninterrupted information relevant to drought such as soil moisture and vegetation stress. Drought conditions manifest in multiple and complex ways. Accordingly, a large number of drought indices have been defined to signal abnormally dry conditions and their effects on crop growth, river flow, groundwater, and so on (Tate and Gustard, 2000). In the field of radar remote sensing, much work has been devoted to developing algorithms to retrieve geophysical parameters such as soil moisture, crop biomass, and vegetation water content. In principle, these parameters would be highly relevant for monitoring agricultural drought. However, despite the existence of a number of radar satellite systems, progress in the use of radar in environmental monitoring, particularly in respect to agriculture, has been slower than anticipated. This may be attributed to the complex nature of radar interactions with agricultural targets and the suboptimal configuration of the satellite sensors available in the 1990s (Ulaby, 1998; Bouman et al., 1999). Because most attention is still devoted to the problem of deriving high-quality soil moisture and vegetation products, there have been few investigations on how to combine such radar products with other data and models to obtain value-added agricultural drought products.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
KyungHwa Kim ◽  
WongKyung Jang ◽  
Hyun Kim ◽  
JoonHwan Shim

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Ban ◽  
Y. Gao ◽  
J. Potts ◽  
D. Wachs

Author(s):  
Tran Thi Thuy Ha ◽  
Nguyen Dac Hai ◽  
Bui Thanh Tung

Abstract: This paper presents the design, fabrication and operation of a highly symmetrical two-axis capacitive sensor. The proposed sensor consists of five electrodes, including of an excitation electrode and two pairs of sensing electrodes with exactly the same dimensions, arranged at identified symmetrically locations on a 3D printed hollow sphere, which containing dielectric medium formed by the partly filled oil and the remaining air. The proposed sensor can measure the tilt angle about the x-axis and y-axis with symmetrical outputs. The proposed sensor is fabricated using a rapid prototyping technology and mounted on the surface of a printed circuit board (PCB) for mechanical packaging and signal processing. Experimental measurement results show that the sensor system can measure the tilt angle in both the x- and y-axis with sensitivity of 103 mV/degree and resolution of ±1 degree in the range of -30 degree to +30 degree. This sensor system can be used in many military and consumer applications. Keywords: Capacitive sensor, Fluidic sensor, Two-axis tilt angle sensor.


Author(s):  
Oscar S. van de Ven ◽  
Ruimin Yang ◽  
Sha Xia ◽  
Jeroen P. van Schieveen ◽  
Jo W. Spronck ◽  
...  

Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (12) ◽  
pp. 3585 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pisana Placidi ◽  
Laura Gasperini ◽  
Alessandro Grassi ◽  
Manuela Cecconi ◽  
Andrea Scorzoni

The rapid development and wide application of the IoT (Internet of Things) has pushed toward the improvement of current practices in greenhouse technology and agriculture in general, through automation and informatization. The experimental and accurate determination of soil moisture is a matter of great importance in different scientific fields, such as agronomy, soil physics, geology, hydraulics, and soil mechanics. This paper focuses on the experimental characterization of a commercial low-cost “capacitive” coplanar soil moisture sensor that can be housed in distributed nodes for IoT applications. It is shown that at least for a well-defined type of soil with a constant solid matter to volume ratio, this type of capacitive sensor yields a reliable relationship between output voltage and gravimetric water content.


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