Abstract
Open source in-situ environmental sensor hardware continues to expand across the geosphere to a variety of applications. These systems typically perform three fundamental tasks: sample sensors at a specified time or period, save data onto retrievable media, switch power to components on and off in between sample cycles to conserve battery energy and increase field operation time. This is commonly accomplished through integrating separate off-the-shelf components into the desired system such as: power relays, SD card hardware, Real-Time Clocks (RTCs), and coin cell batteries. To enable faster prototyping, the Openly Published Environmental Sensing Lab abstracted all of these requirements into a single PCB that can be dropped into any project to achieve these commonly-required capabilities. The hardware is laid out in a “Feather” form factor, a popular configuration in the open-source hardware community, to easily mate with other industry standard products. The onboard RTC acts as an alarm clock that wakes a user-attached micro controller from low-power sleep modes in between sample cycles. By integrating all these components into a single PCB, we save cost while significantly reducing physical system size. The design as well as a suite of code functions that enable the user to configure all the Hypnos board features are detailed. For more information, please visit open-sensing.org/projects.
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