Charging the Sensor Node
In this point, the charge of the energy storage capacitor when applying the proposed method is studied in detail. We take into consideration that from the point of view of the measurement, it can be executed if the voltage capacitor
reaches at least 4.374 V.
Figure 11 presents the behavior of the energy accumulator capacitor
for all sensor nodes in the previous proposed experiment when our method is applied.
Figure 11a–d present the
voltage in each sensor node when the sinusoidal charging tone
is 24, 18, 10 and 5 V
, respectively.
At first, we observe in
Figure 11a that all signals reach the fully charged voltage within the 20 ms duration of the sinusoidal charging tone when the voltage applied is 24 V
. In case of a
equal to 18 V
, only the deepest sensor node does not reach the fully charging voltage (6 V). However, it achieves a voltage greater than the minimum required voltage to execute correctly the measurement
as shown in
Figure 11b. When the voltage applied with the SCT is 10 or 5 V
, the third and fifth deepest sensor nodes do not hit the desired fully charged voltage respectively (see
Figure 11c,d for more details). However, the third deepest sensor node when
is 10 V
and the fifth deepest sensor when
is 5 V
beat the minimum required voltage to execute the measurement.
Table 9 presents the required times to reach the fully charged state
when we apply our proposed method during 20 ms of the SCT with several voltages. In case of using a
equal to 24 V
when our proposed method is applied, all ten sensor nodes of the network branch reach the fully charging condition within the 20 ms duration of the charging tone defined in the ISO 11784/11785 HDX. As shown in the second column of this
Table 9, the slowest, that is the deepest, sensor node hits the fully charging state in less than 15.8 ms. In case of using a
equal to 18 V
, the deepest sensor node of the network branch does not reach the fully charging state along the 20 ms charging tone. However, this sensor node gets the minimum charging voltage to execute the measurement in 15.5 ms. So even though not all sensor nodes reach the fully charged condition, it is possible to execute the measurement correctly in the complete network branch.
When the SCT amplitude is 10 V, the three deepest sensor nodes never reach the fully charged condition and only the third deepest sensor node gets a voltage greater than . In this case, the measurement can be executed in the eight sensor nodes. Finally, when only 5 V are applied, the five less deepest sensor nodes reach the fully charging condition. In addition, the fifth deepest sensor node beats the . It takes only 12.3 ms of the SCT.
Figure 12 presents the voltage applied to each microprocessor of a network branch with ten sensor nodes when it is used our proposed charging method. We observe in
Figure 12, that all the processors have a stable voltage within the first 5 ms of the SCT with
equal to 24 V
. This stable voltage is reached in less than 8 ms when the applied voltage is reduced to 18 V
. The deepest sensor node turns on and then turns off close to the 18 ms and the 20.5 ms time instants, respectively, and never reaches the stable condition when 10 V
is set in
. Finally, when it is applied for 5 ms the deepest sensor node never turns on. In addition, the second deepest sensor node turns on and off in a short time period of 2 ms. However, this sensor node never reaches the stable voltage condition.
Table 10 presents the most important time parameters from
Figure 12. As was appointed in the evaluation of the charging time of the energy accumulator capacitor in previous paragraphs, when the input SCT has an amplitude of 24 V
, all the ten sensor nodes of the network branch under test run correctly. The deepest sensor node is the slowest and it requires at least 5.059 ms to reach the stable voltage. In a similar way, when
is set to 18 V
the deepest sensor node requires only 7.538 ms to reach the stability in its microprocessor voltage. It is remarkable that, for all the tests performed using our proposed charging method, the voltage applied to the microprocessor does not turn on and off repetitively like it is observed when using the traditional charging method.
Combining the fully charging times information from
Figure 11, the microprocessors stable running times from
Table 10 and using Equation (
2), it is possible to determine the minimum charging time that requires the network branch to execute correctly a snapshot measurement.
Table 11 presents these data.
In comparison with the traditional approach summarized in
Table 8, our proposed charging method always enables more sensor nodes to execute the measurement. For example, in case of using a
of 24 V
, all the sensor nodes can execute the experiment when our proposal is used in contrast to the traditional method that is able to charge correctly 2 sensor nodes only. Certainly, increasing of the number of working correctly sensor nodes requires extra time in comparison with the traditional method. However, with the traditional method it is impossible to run the measurement on those additional sensor nodes, despite increasing the duration of the SCT up to the ISO 11784/11785 limit of 50 ms.
The great advantage is produced when
is set to only 5 V
. In this case, the proposed method allows one to execute the measurement in 5 sensor nodes with a fully charged energy accumulator capacitor in comparison with the traditional method that allows three sensor nodes to run at most in the same conditions. In addition, as shown in the last two columns of this
Table 11, it is possible to execute the measurement correctly in an extra deeper node than the ones shown in column two if we assume that the charged voltage of the energy accumulator beats the
without reaching the fully charged state. Taking into consideration this condition, the total number of available sensor nodes are 10, 8 and 6 when 18, 10 and 5 V
are applied respectively in
. Taking into account a maximum distance of 6 m between the sensor nodes and the hub, ten sensor nodes imply a network branch 60 m deep.