DocumentCode
715544
Title
Applications of a wireless chloride sensor in environmental monitoring
Author
Harris, Nick ; Cranny, Andy ; Rivers, Mark ; Smettem, Keith
Author_Institution
Electron. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of Southampton, Southampton, UK
fYear
2015
fDate
13-15 April 2015
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
5
Abstract
There is an established need to measure soil salinity, and wireless sensor networks offer the potential to achieve this, coupled with a suitable sensor. However, suitable sensors, up until very recently, have not been available. In this paper we report on the fabrication and calibration of a new low-cost, robust, screen-printed sensor for detecting chloride ions. We also report on two experiments using this sensor. The first is a laboratory-based experiment that shows how sensors can be used to validate modeling results by installing several sensors in a soil column and tracking the vertical migration of a chloride pulse in real time. The second is a trial of multiple sensors installed in a fluvarium (stream simulator) showing that distributed sensors are able to monitor real time changes in horizontal chloride flux in an emulated natural environment. We report on results from both surface flows as well as from sensors at a depth of a few mm in the fluvarium sediment, and differences and trends between the two are discussed. As an example of how such sensors are useful, we note that for the flow regime and sediment type tested, penetration of surface chloride into the river bed is unexpectedly slow and raises questions regarding the dynamics of pollutants in such systems. We conclude that such sensors, coupled with a distributed network, offer a new paradigm in hydrological monitoring and will enable new applications, such as irrigation using mixtures of potable and brackish water with significant cost and resource saving.
Keywords
calibration; chemical sensors; environmental monitoring (geophysics); hydrological techniques; wireless sensor networks; calibration; distributed network; environmental monitoring; hydrological monitoring; river bed; wireless chloride sensor; wireless sensor networks; Agriculture; Australia; Pollution measurement; Rivers; Soil; Soil measurements; Wireless sensor networks; chloride sensor; environment; hydrology; wireless sensor network;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Sensors Applications Symposium (SAS), 2015 IEEE
Conference_Location
Zadar
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SAS.2015.7133591
Filename
7133591
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