Abstract

The development of perpetually powered sensor networks for environment monitoring to avoid periodic battery replacement and to ensure the network never goes offline due to power is one of the primary goals in sensor network design. In many environment-monitoring applications, the sensor network is internet-connected, making the energy budget high because data must be transmitted regularly to a server through an uplink device. Determining the optimal solar panel size that will deliver sufficient energy to the sensor network in a given period is therefore of primary importance. The traditional technique of sizing solar photovoltaic (PV) panels is based on balancing the solar panel power rating and expected hours of radiation in a given area with the load wattage and hours of use. However, factors like the azimuth and tilt angles of alignment, operating temperature, dust accumulation, intermittent sunshine and seasonal effects influencing the duration of maximum radiation in a day all reduce the expected power output and cause this technique to greatly underestimate the required solar panel size. The majority of these factors are outside the scope of human control and must be therefore be budgeted for using an error factor. Determining of the magnitude of the error factor to use is crucial to prevent not only undersizing the panel, but also to prevent oversizing which will increase the cost of operationalizing the sensor network. But modeling error factors when there are many parameters to consider is not trivial. Equally importantly, the concept of microclimate may cause any two nodes of similar specifications to have very different power performance when located in the same climatological zone. There is then a need to change the solar panel sizing philosophy for these systems. This paper proposed the use of actual observed solar radiation and battery state of charge data in a realistic WSN-based automatic weather station in an outdoor uncontrolled environment. We then develop two mathematical models that can be used to determine the required minimum solar PV wattage that will ensure that the battery stays above a given threshold given the weather patterns of the area. The predicted and observed battery state of charge values have correlations of 0.844 and 0.935 and exhibit Root Mean Square Errors of 9.2% and 1.7% for the discrete calculus model and the transfer function estimation (TFE) model respectively. The results show that the models perform very well in state of charge prediction and subsequent determination of ideal solar panel rating for sensor networks used in environment monitoring applications.

Highlights

  • Environment monitoring systems are devices with electronic sensors and sensor networks that are deployed outdoors to quantify weather elements and are typically powered using solar energy

  • The traditional sizing technique for solar PV panels is a computation involving the hours of sunshine per day, the wattage of the loads, and the power output of the solar panel

  • The discrete calculus model shows a weaker performance than the transfer function estimation (TFE) model with the difference in root-mean-square error (RMSE) being 7.5 units

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Summary

Introduction

Environment monitoring systems are devices with electronic sensors and sensor networks that are deployed outdoors to quantify weather elements and are typically powered using solar energy. The traditional sizing technique for solar PV panels (solar panels) is a computation involving the hours of sunshine per day, the wattage of the loads, and the power output of the solar panel. Where PL is the wattage for the load that draws power for t hours and N is the expected number of sunshine hours per day, which varies by season. That is based on a blanket number representing total sunshine hours in order to calculate the energy produced from the panel, will be inherently flawed if these factors are not quantified to make the necessary adjustments

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