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Wireless Water Level Monitoring System

This document describes the design of a wireless water level monitoring system using an ATMEGA 16 microcontroller. The system uses a water level sensor and wireless networking capabilities to monitor and transmit water level data without wired connections. It was tested and found to work effectively for both home and industrial applications. The system aims to save time by automating water level monitoring and prevent water waste.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
120 views6 pages

Wireless Water Level Monitoring System

This document describes the design of a wireless water level monitoring system using an ATMEGA 16 microcontroller. The system uses a water level sensor and wireless networking capabilities to monitor and transmit water level data without wired connections. It was tested and found to work effectively for both home and industrial applications. The system aims to save time by automating water level monitoring and prevent water waste.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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WIRLESS WATER LEVEL MONITORING SYSTEM

Absract:This paper presents the design and testing of a wireless sensor system developed using an ATMEGA 16 based WATER LE EL !E"!#R $ %n response to the &omple'ity of time and te&hnology ( the o&&urren&e of saving time and &ompleting the need without wasting water in home and industrial field( a WWLM! whi&h was &ombined with water level measuring sensor $ wireless) networ*ing &ommuni&ation te&hni&alness and data a&+uisition te&hni&alness is designed to redu&e &able &onne&tion with enhan&ed data rate$ The spe&ifi& absorption rate distribution &an also be studied by finite)differen&e time)domain method$$ The system has been verified at broad)level and pra&ti&al appli&ation$ The result was also provided$ Embedded Rf %nformation ,road&ast !ystem based on A R mi&ro&ontroller was designed and implemented$

BLOCK DIAGRAM:-

Mi&ro&ontroller -) A mi&ro&ontroller often serves as the .brain/ of a me&hatroni& system$ Li*e a mini( self &ontained &omputer( it &an be programmed to intera&t with both the hardware of the system and the user$ Even the most basi& mi&ro&ontroller &an perform simple math operations( &ontrol digital outputs( and monitor digital inputs$ As the

&omputer industry has evolved( so has the te&hnology asso&iated with mi&ro&ontrollers$ "ewer mi&ro&ontrollers are mu&h faster( have more memory( and have a host of input and output features that dwarf the ability of earlier models$ Most modern &ontrollers have analog)to)digital &onverters( high)speed timers and &ounters( interrupt &apabilities( outputs that &an be pulse)width modulated( serial &ommuni&ation ports( et&$

The high)performan&e( low)power Atmel 0)bit A R R%!1)based mi&ro&ontroller &ombines 162, of programmable flash memory( 12, !RAM( 314, EE5R#M( an 0)&hannel 16)bit A78 &onverter( and a 9TAG interfa&e for on)&hip debugging$ The devi&e supports throughput of 16 M%5! at 16 M:; and operates between <$3)3$3 volts$ ,y e'e&uting instru&tions in a single &lo&* &y&le( the devi&e a&hieves throughputs approa&hing 1 M%5! per M:;( balan&ing power &onsumption and pro&essing speed$

A M1= has some ports$ 5orts are 5%"s on the M1= that &an be turned on and off by program$ #n means 3 and off means 6 or G"8 $This behavior is for #=T5=T mode$ They &an also be put in %"5=T mode$ %n %"5=T mode they &an read what is the signal level on them >only on and off?$%f voltage is more than a threshold voltage >usually half the supply? it is reported as #">1? otherwise #@@>6?$This is how M1= &ontrol everything $MaAority of the 5%"s of a M1= are 5#RT so you &an hoo*up lots of gi;mos to it BBBThey are named 5#RTA (5#RT, (5#RT1 (5#RT8 et& $They are of one byte whi&h means 0 ,itts all bits of them are &onne&ted to e'ternal pins and are available outside the &hip$ %n smaller &hips only some of the eight bits are available$ !etting 5#RT,C6b66666661 will set 5#RT,Ds ;eroth bit high that is 3 will be low >G"8?$ while remaining 5%"s

@eatures-)
E Low)band R@ range- 4$FG4$H G:; E :igh)band R@ range- F$FGF$0 G:; E !uperheterodyne re&eiver >%@ baseband C << M:;? E !uperheterodyne transmitter >%@ baseband C 10 M:;? E :alf)duple' trans&eiverIallows T88 E =se up to two modules for dual)band or M%M# appli&ations E 5lug and 5lay with Lyrte&hJs !@@ !8R evaluation module E H M:; and 44 M:; software)sele&table RK bandwidths E R@ transmission power up to F6 d,m E 1ontrollable RK gain up to 13 d, >or 16)d, attenuation? for AG1 implementation E 8ual !%!# or 4L4 M%M# modes

Circuit diagram :Receiver part

1on&lusion The devi&es detailed in this do&ument will provide many benefits for the implementation of &ommuni&ation lin*s using R@ over A R ,oard$ Among these benefits are signifi&ant system noise figure improvement( substantial power effi&ien&y( in&reased bandwidth( and mu&h greater transmission distan&e >range?( all resulting in superior &onsumer end produ&ts and therefore( a&hieving mu&h higher end)user satisfa&tion

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