Litcius/Paper detail

In-vivo proximal monitoring system for plant water stress and biological activity based on stem electrical impedance

Stefano Calvo, Mattia Barezzi, Danilo Demarchi, Umberto Garlando

202314 citationsDOI

Abstract

Population growth and global warming are the main threats to food production. Food security, producing enough food for the entire population, is becoming harder, and new strategies must be applied. Smart agriculture tackles this problem by integrating field sensors and data with the farmers’ knowledge to increase crop yield and reduce resource waste.This paper proposes a system to monitor the plant water stress status. This system monitors the plant directly and does not rely on environmental sensors. Acquired data are sent to a remote server thanks to LoRa communication. The designed system is low-power and relies on a single battery with more than five years of expected lifetime. The system monitors the trunk electrical impedance of plants thanks to a relaxation oscillator with a portion of the trunk in the feedback loop. This way, changes in the impedance are reflected in changes in the oscillator frequency.Two systems were installed directly in the fields and connected to apple trees. Statistical analyses were performed on the acquired data. The correlation between the trunk frequency values and the soil water potential is above 75% for both plants.The proposed system is low-power and low-cost and could be directly adopted in the fields. It can detect the water status of plants directly, avoiding environmental sensors.

Topics & Concepts

Electrical impedanceIn vivoStress (linguistics)Water stressFocused Impedance MeasurementMaterials scienceBiomedical engineeringElectrical engineeringEngineeringBiologyBiotechnologyBotanyLinguisticsPhilosophySmart Agriculture and AIPlant and Biological Electrophysiology Studies
In-vivo proximal monitoring system for plant water stress and biological activity based on stem electrical impedance | Litcius