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Greenhouse Monitor

Greenhouse Monitor. An ECE351 lab by ben olson and adam howard (team 3). Goals. 1. Keep track of environmental temperature If it’s too hot, notify the user on seven-segment display If it’s too cold, notify the user on the seven-segment display

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Greenhouse Monitor

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  1. GreenhouseMonitor An ECE351 lab by ben olson and adamhoward (team 3)

  2. Goals 1 • Keep track of environmental temperature • If it’s too hot, notify the user on seven-segment display • If it’s too cold, notify the user on the seven-segment display • User-controllable maximum/minimum temperature • Determine ambient light • If it’s too dark, notify the user on the seven-segment display • User-controllable maximum/minimum light level (0-255). • Learn advanced VHDL to make the code extremely efficient

  3. Auxilary Goals 2 • Notification I/O to the VGA port • Releasing water to plant at a user-specified frequency • Playing a beep when too hot/cold/dark An example of the Basys 2’s VGA capabilities

  4. Necessary Materials 3 • A plant • PmodALS - Ambient Light Sensor • PmodTMP3 - Temperature Sensor • Basys 2 board • Auxilary materials: • VGA monitor (readily available) • Water deployment system; small switch from Radio Shack • Beeper

  5. Relevance 4 • Being able to tell if the growing environment is right for your plant • Not having to water your plant manually if it is sensitive to watering times • Sold on a large scale for roughly $100: • http://www.koubachi.com/features/sensor?locale=en • http://gizmodo.com/six-systems-to-monitor-your-garden-without-setting-foot-1448871866 • http://www.houzz.com/photos/1586274/Botanicalls-Plant-Monitor--home-electronics- The final product will have similar features to the popular Botanicalls Plant Monitor

  6. Conclusion 5 • Total cost: $35 for 2 Pmods • Measures the ambient light and temperature and notifies the user of it • Useful in everyday life

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