MONITORING OF ELECTRICAL SYSTEM USING INTERNET OF THINGS WITH SMART CURRENT ELECTRIC SENSORS

Authors

  • Muhammad Hafizd Ibnu Hajar Faculty of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Universitas Mercu Buana, Indonesia http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0498-3860
  • Akhmad Wahyu Dani Faculty of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Universitas Mercu Buana, Indonesia
  • Satriyo Miharno Faculty of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Universitas Mercu Buana, Indonesia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22441/sinergi.2018.3.010

Keywords:

Monitoring System, Internet of Things, Wemos Module, Current Electric SCT-013 000

Abstract

Electricity is one of the most important human needs. In the presence of electricity it can facilitate human work. But it should be noted that too large and uncontrolled electricity use will be wasteful and get high costs. The problem is that electricity is not monitored accurately, easily and efficiently. This study aims to design an electric current monitoring device with an IoT system. IoT is a concept with the ability to transfer data by network, no need humans to humans or humans to PCs. In this concept, the SCT 013-000 electric current sensor is connected to the load, it will be show electric current value in the LCD, if the electric current which is determined exceeds the capacity, Wemos D1 including Wifi ESP 8266 will be sending a notification to the telegram. The system has been implemented with ironing load for 3.29%, the dispenser load is 0.20% and Magicom's get load for 1.07%. The delay time also has been implemented in the relay for 1.50 second when relay is on and 0.78 second when relay is off. When the notification send to the telegram also have a delay for 6.2 second. So, monitoring of electrical system using internet of things with smart current electric sensors has been done.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2018-10-29

How to Cite

[1]
M. H. Ibnu Hajar, A. W. Dani, and S. Miharno, “MONITORING OF ELECTRICAL SYSTEM USING INTERNET OF THINGS WITH SMART CURRENT ELECTRIC SENSORS”, Sinergi, vol. 22, no. 3, pp. 211–218, Oct. 2018.

Issue

Section

Articles

Most read articles by the same author(s)

Similar Articles

> >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.