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e-Article

A TEG-Based Non-Intrusive Ultrasonic System for Autonomous Water Flow Rate Measurement
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Sustainable Computing IEEE Trans. Sustain. Comput. Sustainable Computing, IEEE Transactions on. 8(3):363-374 Sep, 2023
Subject
Computing and Processing
Acoustics
Task analysis
Ultrasonic variables measurement
Meters
Uninterruptible power systems
Sensors
Temperature measurement
Energy harvesting
energy management unit
IoT
LoRa
non-intrusive
TEG
thermoelectric generator
ultrasonic sensors
water flow rate measurement
task-based computing
Language
ISSN
2377-3782
2377-3790
Abstract
Residential water meters accommodate various methods of power provisioning. Electromagnetic and ultrasonic meters, for example, often rely on a battery-like external power source, whereas mechanical meters harvest energy from water flow through an impeller. Although energy harvesting (EH) minimizes maintenance needs driven by battery depletion/replenishment, placing a physical element into the flow adversely affects water pressure. This intrusive EH/sensing technique is not user-friendly either since the meters with impellers need to be embedded into pipes by skilled personnel. Hence, this paper proposes a non-intrusive sensor system powered by thermoelectric generators (TEGs) for plug-and-play water flow rate measurement. This system, equipped with a custom-made energy management unit (EMU), adopts ultrasonic sensors, a task-based computing scheme, and a LoRa module for autonomous sensing and reporting of the flow rate. After summarizing thermoelectricity and delta time-of-flight ($\Delta$ΔToF)-based ultrasonic sensing theory, we provide the system model and design details with a particular focus on the EMU. Then, we experimentally evaluate the system under varying conditions, demonstrating their impact on average sensing and transmission periods. The results unveil that our proposal can achieve high measurement precision ($\pm 1.4\%$±1.4%), comparable to its intrusive and battery-powered counterparts, and thus has the potential of replacing the residential water meters.