Antennas for mussel-based underwater biological sensor networks in rivers

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Abstract

Researchers are working on using freshwater mussels as biological sensors. A sensor placed on the mussel detects the mussel's rhythmic opening and closing, or gape. Changes in the gape can indicate changes in the mussel's environment. We plan to attach gape sensors, microcontrollers, and radios to mussels and place them back in their natural environment. Small, inexpensive radios operating in the Industrial, Scientific and Medical (ISM) bands will provide the physical link of an underwater wireless sensor network (WSN). Despite the attenuation radio waves experience in water, the low cost of these radios should allow us to deploy enough to set up a reliable communications network. While commercially available radios can be used underwater with waterproofing, antennas designed for use in air are unsuitable for use in water, because of the different electromagnetic properties of water and air. We designed dipole, loop, and folded dipole antennas for use in water and attached these to transmitters. We measured the power transmitted by the antennas by immersing the transmitters in a tank of water and measuring the received power at different distances using a small dipole antenna attached to a spectrum analyzer. The distance between the antennas was precisely controlled with a motorized xy positioner. © 2010 ACM.

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APA

Hunt, K. P., Niemeier, J. J., & Kruger, A. (2010). Antennas for mussel-based underwater biological sensor networks in rivers. In Proceedings of the 5th ACM International Workshop on UnderWater Networks, WUWNet ’10. https://doi.org/10.1145/1868812.1868825

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