Autonomous Temperature Sensor for Smart Agriculture

Energy Harvesting and Control

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Abstract

Many countries in the world face the problem of fruit frost during spring, which results in the loss of harvested crops. Solutions exist to prevent the fruit to freeze, however this requires that the temperature is known. Therefore, a smart autonomous temperature sensor network is designed that is capable of acquiring a 3D temperature profile of a fruit orchard to detect fruit frost. This thesis discusses the design of the energy harvesting and control module, which is one of the three sub-modules of the system. The goal is to sustain the energy demands of the sensor in a durable way, in order to operate for 20 years without requiring maintenance. To achieve this, several ambient energy sources and their harvesting techniques are investigated and simulated to examine the energy that can be harvested. This resulted in the use of solar energy, harvested by a solar cell and controlled by a maximum power point tracking module. Next, different energy storage implementations are considered to store the harvested energy temporarily. The use of a 5 F supercapacitor is concluded. Furthermore, an energy monitoring circuit is designed to measure the energy stored in the supercapacitor. Full system reliability simulations are done to verify the complete design by utilising the solar irradiance and temperature data of the past ten years. From these simulations is concluded that the design can sustain the energy demands of the sensor at all times.