Applied Sciences (Mar 2019)

Autonomous Soil Water Content Sensors Based on Bipolar Transistors Encapsulated in Porous Ceramic Blocks

  • Pedro Carvalhaes-Dias,
  • Flávio J.O. Morais,
  • Luís F. C. Duarte,
  • Andreu Cabot,
  • J. A. Siqueira Dias

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app9061211
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. 1211

Abstract

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We present an autonomous sensor to measure soil water content that uses a single heat pulse probe based on a transistor encapsulated in a porous block. The sensor uses a bipolar junction transistor, which performs as both a heating and temperature-sensing element. Since the sensor depends on a porous block to measure the matric potential of the soil, it does not suffer from accuracy problems if the contact between the probe and the soil is not perfect. A prototype of the sensor showed a temperature variation of Δ T = 2.9   ∘ C when the porous ceramic was saturated with water. The sensor presented an almost linear behavior for small changes in the matric potential of a red latosol when tested in the 1-kPa and 35-kPa pressure range, showing a sensitivity of S = 0.015   ∘ C/kPa. The ultra-low power signal conditioning circuit can read the sensor’s temperature with a resolution of approximately 0.02   ∘ C, so the matric potential can be read in increments of at least 1.33 kPa. When powered only by a 2-F supercapacitor from the energy-harvesting system, the interrogation circuit is able to take one soil water content measurement per day, for eleven days.

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