Documente Academic
Documente Profesional
Documente Cultură
EXISTING SYSTEM
The emerging global water crisis: Managing scarcity and conflict between water
users
For the first time in human history, human use and pollution of freshwater have
reached a level where water scarcity will potentially limit food production, ecosystem
function, and urban supply in the decades to come. The primary reason for this
shortage is population growth, which has increased at a faster rate than food
production for some years and will add up to 3 billion more people by the middle of
the twentyfirst century, mostly in poor and watershort countries. Water quality
degradation has also contributed significantly to a number of problems of global
concern, including human drinking water supply and species survival. As of today,
some 1.1 billion planetary inhabitants do not have access to clean drinking water, and
2.6 billion do not have sanitation services. Water pollution is a leading cause of death
worldwide, and transmits or supports numerous debilitating diseases to populations
forced to drink contaminated water. Agriculture is by far the leading user of
freshwater worldwide, accounting for almost 85% of global consumption. Because of
growing demand, we will need to raise food production by nearly 50% in the next 50
years to maintain our present per capita supply, assuming that the productivity of
existing farmland does not decline. Further, we will have to increase it by much more
if we are also to alleviate malnutrition among the poorest members of our current
population. For a variety of reasons, feasible expansion of irrigated agriculture will be
able to accommodate only a portion of this increased demand, and the rest must come
from an increase in the productivity of rain fed agriculture. In the absence of
coordinated planning and international cooperation at an unprecedented scale, the
next half century will be plagued by a host of severe waterrelated problems,
threatening the well being of many terrestrial ecosystems and drastically impairing
human health, particularly in the poorest regions of the world. The latter portion of
this chapter discusses ways in which this emerging crisis may be mitigated.
A hybrid wired/wireless networking infrastructure for greenhouse management
In this paper, the problems related to the management of a farm made up of several
greenhouses are discussed. The management of this kind of farms requires data
acquisition in each greenhouse and their transfer to a control unit which is usually
located in a control room, separated from the production area. At present, the data
transfer between the greenhouses and the control system is mainly provided by a
suitable wired communication system, such as a field bus. In such contexts, even
though the replacement of the wired system with a fully wireless one can appear very
attractive, a fully wireless system can introduce some disadvantages. A solution based
on a hybrid wired/wireless network, where Controller Area Network and ZigBee
protocols are used, is presented along with all the related problems that this
integration involves. In particular, in order to integrate at the Data Link Layer the
wireless section with the wired one, a suitable multi protocol bridge has been
implemented. Moreover, at the Application Layer, porting of Smart Distributed
System services on ZigBee, called ZSDS, allows one to access the network resources
independently from the network segment they are connected to.
PROPOSED SYSTEM
The development of the deployment of an automated irrigation system based on
microcontrollers and wireless communication at experimental scale within rural areas
is presented. The aim of the implementation was to demonstrate that the automatic
irrigation can be used to reduce water use. The implementation is a photovoltaic
powered automated irrigation system that consists of a distributed wireless network of
soil moisture and temperature sensors deployed in plant root zones. Each sensor node
involved a soil-moisture probe, a temperature probe, a microcontroller for data
acquisition, and a radio transceiver; the sensor measurements are transmitted to a
microcontroller-based receiver. This gateway permits the automated activation of
irrigation when the threshold values of soil moisture and temperature are reached.
Communication between the sensor nodes and the data receiver is via the Zigbee
protocol [65], [66] under the IEEE 802.15.4WPAN. This receiver unit also has a
duplex communication link based on a cellular-Internet interface, using general packet
radio service (GPRS) protocol, which is a packet-oriented mobile data service used in
2G and 3G cellular global system for mobile communications (GSM). The Internet
connection allows the data inspection in real time on a website, where the soilmoisture and temperature levels are graphically displayed through an application
interface and stored in a database server. This access also enables direct programming
of scheduled irrigation schemes and trigger values in the receiver according the crop
growth and season management. Because of its energy autonomy and low cost, the
system has potential use for organic crops, which are mainly located in geographically
isolated areas where the energy grid is far away.
BLOCK DIAGRAM
HARDWARE REQUIREMENTS:
Android mobile
Power supply
GSM
Water pump
Solenoid valve
Temperature senor
Moisture sensor
ARM-7 - LPC2129 controller
SOFTWARES USED
1. Embedded C
2. Keil Compiler
3. Flash Magic
CONCLUSION
The automated irrigation system implemented was found to be feasible and cost
effective for optimizing water resources for agricultural production. This irrigation
system allows cultivation in places with water scarcity thereby improving
sustainability.
The automated irrigation system developed proves that the use of water can be
diminished for a given amount of fresh biomass production. The use of solar power in
this irrigation system is pertinent and significantly important for organic crops and
other agricultural products that are geographically isolated, where the investment in
electric power supply would be expensive.
The irrigation system can be adjusted to a variety of specific crop needs and
requires minimum maintenance. The modular configuration of the automated
irrigation system allows it to be scaled up for larger greenhouses or open fields. In
addition, other applications such as temperature monitoring in compost production
can be easily implemented. The Internet controlled duplex communication system
provides a powerful decisionmaking device concept for adaptation to several
cultivation scenarios. Furthermore, the Internet link allows the supervision through
mobile telecommunication devices, such as a smartphone.
Besides the monetary savings in water use, the importance of the preservation of
this natural resource justify the use of this kind of irrigation systems.