4.7 Article

Towards Precision Agriculture: IoT-Enabled Intelligent Irrigation Systems Using Deep Learning Neural Network

Journal

IEEE SENSORS JOURNAL
Volume 21, Issue 16, Pages 17479-17491

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSEN.2021.3069266

Keywords

Irrigation; Predictive models; Sensors; Soil moisture; Intelligent sensors; Data models; Deep learning; Deep learning; long short term memory; Internet of Things; precision agriculture; sensor

Funding

  1. Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India

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Precision agriculture has gained attention due to growing demands for food and water, leading to the need for more efficient farming methods. This paper introduces an intelligent irrigation system using deep learning to predict soil moisture content and optimize water usage, outperforming current models in experimental farming.
Recently, precision agriculture has gained substantial attention due to the ever-growing world population demands for food and water. Consequently, farmers will need water and arable land to meet this demand. Due to the limited availability of both resources, farmers need a solution that changes the way they operate. Precision irrigation is the solution to deliver bigger, better, and more profitable yields with fewer resources. Several machine learning-based irrigation models have been proposed to use water more efficiently. Due to the limited learning ability of these models, they are not well suited to unpredictable climates. In this context, this paper proposes a deep learning neural network-based Internet of Things (IoT)-enabled intelligent irrigation system for precision agriculture (DLiSA). This is a feedback integrated system that keeps its functionality better in the weather of any region for any period of time. DLiSA utilizes a long short-term memory network (LSTM) to predict the volumetric soil moisture content for one day ahead, irrigation period, and spatial distribution of water required to feed the arable land. It is evident from the simulation results that DLiSA uses water more wisely than state-of-the-art models in the experimental farming area.

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