A LoRa-based Dual-CPU Core Salton Sea Environmental Monitoring Wireless Sensor System

Author(s):  
Alejandro Peraza ◽  
Andrew Freiha ◽  
Carlos Hernandez ◽  
Kris Whaley ◽  
Thomas Barbarito ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saeed Mohsen ◽  
Abdullah G. Alharbi

Abstract Harmful environments can cause seriously health problems to humans. Thus, it is should be develop a generation of wireless sensor systems that are energy self-powered to monitor physical parameters of an ambient environment in real-time and sending these parameters remotely to an IoT cloud service. In this paper, a wireless sensor system is proposed for an environmental monitoring. This system is based on two sensors and a NodeMCU board that includes a microcontroller with a Wi-Fi chip. This system is built to measure the ambient temperature, relative humidity, atmospheric pressure, and ultraviolet (UV) index. The power supply of the sensor system is a solar energy harvester, which consists of a solar cell, a DC-DC converter, and a rechargeable battery. This harvester is practically tested outdoors under direct sunlight. The wireless sensor system experimentally consumes an average power of 40 mW over one hour and the life-time of this system is 123 hours in active-sleep mode. The results demonstrate that the wireless sensor system has long-term and sustainable operation of the monitoring of an environmental data.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (12) ◽  
pp. 3976
Author(s):  
Sun Jin Kim ◽  
Myeong-Lok Seol ◽  
Byun-Young Chung ◽  
Dae-Sic Jang ◽  
Jonghwan Kim ◽  
...  

Self-powered wireless sensor systems have emerged as an important topic for condition monitoring in nuclear power plants. However, commercial wireless sensor systems still cannot be fully self-sustainable due to the high power consumption caused by excessive signal processing in a mini-electronic computing system. In this sense, it is essential not only to integrate the sensor system with energy-harvesting devices but also to develop simple data processing methods for low power schemes. In this paper, we report a patch-type vibration visualization (PVV) sensor system based on the triboelectric effect and a visualization technique for self-sustainable operation. The PVV sensor system composed of a polyethylene terephthalate (PET)/Al/LCD screen directly converts the triboelectric signal into an informative black pattern on the LCD screen without excessive signal processing, enabling extremely low power operation. In addition, a proposed image processing method reconverts the black patterns to frequency and acceleration values through a remote-control camera. With these simple signal-to-pattern conversion and pattern-to-data reconversion techniques, a vibration visualization sensor network has successfully been demonstrated.


Electronics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 219
Author(s):  
Phuoc Duc Nguyen ◽  
Lok-won Kim

People nowadays are entering an era of rapid evolution due to the generation of massive amounts of data. Such information is produced with an enormous contribution from the use of billions of sensing devices equipped with in situ signal processing and communication capabilities which form wireless sensor networks (WSNs). As the number of small devices connected to the Internet is higher than 50 billion, the Internet of Things (IoT) devices focus on sensing accuracy, communication efficiency, and low power consumption because IoT device deployment is mainly for correct information acquisition, remote node accessing, and longer-term operation with lower battery changing requirements. Thus, recently, there have been rich activities for original research in these domains. Various sensors used by processing devices can be heterogeneous or homogeneous. Since the devices are primarily expected to operate independently in an autonomous manner, the abilities of connection, communication, and ambient energy scavenging play significant roles, especially in a large-scale deployment. This paper classifies wireless sensor nodes into two major categories based the types of the sensor array (heterogeneous/homogeneous). It also emphasizes on the utilization of ad hoc networking and energy harvesting mechanisms as a fundamental cornerstone to building a self-governing, sustainable, and perpetually-operated sensor system. We review systems representative of each category and depict trends in system development.


2012 ◽  
Vol 59 (11) ◽  
pp. 3124-3130 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. J. Cleven ◽  
Jutta A. Muntjes ◽  
H. Fassbender ◽  
U. Urban ◽  
M. Gortz ◽  
...  

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