Towards Low Cost Soil Sensing Using Wi-Fi

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Abstract

A farm's soil moisture and soil electrical conductivity (EC) readings are extremely valuable for a farmer. They can help her reduce water use and improve productivity. However, the high cost of commercial soil moisture sensors and the inaccuracy of sub-1000 dollar EC sensors have limited their adoption. In this paper, we present the design and implementation of a system, called Strobe, that senses soil moisture and soil EC using RF propagation in existing Wi-Fi bands. Strobe overcomes the key challenge of limited bandwidth availability in the 2.4 GHz unlicensed spectrum using a novel multi-antenna technique. It maps the propagation time and amplitude of Wi-Fi signals received by different antennas to the soil permittivity and EC, which in turn depend on soil moisture and salinity. Our experiments with USRP, WARP, and commodity Wi-Fi cards show that Strobe can accurately estimate soil moisture and EC using Wi-Fi, thereby showing the potential of a future in which a farmer can sense soil in their farm without investing 1000s of dollars in soil sensing equipments.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Ding, J., & Chandra, R. (2019). Towards Low Cost Soil Sensing Using Wi-Fi. In Proceedings of the Annual International Conference on Mobile Computing and Networking, MOBICOM (Vol. 2019-January). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3300061.3345440

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