Charcoal briquettes, made from organic waste. Their quality depends significantly on moisture content, which affects electrical conductivity. This study focuses on automating moisture measurement using electrical resistance. The device employs a current-sensing circuit, an analog-to-digital converter, Hall effect sensors, and servo-driven clamps with plate-shaped electrodes to grip briquettes and measure resistance. Briquettes are fed into the system by a rotary feeder. Testing on batches of 10 briquettes classified as dry, half-dry, and wet showed classification success rates of 100% for either dry or wet conditions and 55.6% for half-dry conditions, despite occasional errors from resistance values outside predefined ranges. Resistance ranges recorded were 11.38–15.80 MΩ (dry), 3.37–7.59 MΩ (half-dry), and 0.02–0.80 MΩ (wet), corresponding to moisture contents of 0–3.03%, 7.27–11.52%, and 11.52–16.36%, respectively. The half-dry resistance values were closer to the wet range, indicating the half-dry batches were not distinctly intermediate between dry and wet. The rotary feeder showed practical reliability with 88% success for loading briquettes into chambers and 77.5% for positioning them on the measurement table, enabling effective automation. Overall, the system demonstrated the capability to measure moisture content and classify briquettes by dryness.
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Pniel et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/696c776ceb60fb80d1395b74 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202668701012/pdf
Muda Vincentius Hosea Pniel
Sanata Dharma University
Harini Bernadeta Wuri
Sanata Dharma University
Sambada Rusdi
Sanata Dharma University
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