Benjamin B. Uzoejinwa

Work place: Department of Agricultural & Bioresources Engineering, University of Nigeria, Nigeria

E-mail: benjamin.uzoejinwa@unn.edu.ng

Website:

Research Interests: Engineering

Biography

Benjamin Bernard Uzoejinwa is a lecturer at the Department of Agricultural and Bio-resources Engineering, University of Nigeria. He obtained the B.Eng and M.Eng degrees all in Agricultural and Bioresources Engineering from the University of Nigeria in 2008 and 2013 respectively. In June 2019, he received the PhD degree in Power Engineering and Engineering Thermophysics from Jiangsu University, China. Benjamin is a member of the International Soil Tillage Research Organization (ISTRO). His research interests include power systems and machinery engineering, biosystems engineering, fuel cell systems, bioenergy, waste-to-energy technology, renewable energy and environmental engineering.

Author Articles
Design of a Green Automated Wireless System for Optimal Irrigation

By Andrews A. Okine Michael O. Appiah Ibrar Ahmad Bismark Asante-Badu Benjamin B. Uzoejinwa

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijcnis.2020.03.03, Pub. Date: 8 Jun. 2020

Towards sustainable agriculture, the management of scarce water resources has become more crucial. In this article, we proffer a green automated wireless system (GAWS) aimed at maximizing and efficiently utilizing water resources for irrigation. The proposed irrigation system is a green technology which will be powered exclusively by solar energy. In its operation, it uses solar-powered wireless sensors for obtaining and transmitting information about soil moisture content of different segments on a given farm. The GAWS will ensure that irrigation is done only when necessary via a solar-powered irrigation control centre. For optimal irrigation, the automated intelligent control centre is designed to trigger solar-powered groundwater pumps wirelessly to execute necessary irrigation for a particular portion of the farm and fall back on an external irrigation system if that proves insufficient. It is envisaged that the proposed irrigation system will improve total crop yields by maximizing the utility of scarce water resources from both internal and external irrigation sources. It will also minimize the cost of time and labour involved in irrigation management, harness renewable energy and be environmentally friendly.

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