Non-Invasive Plant Root Tomography Through Optimized Sonar Array Transducer Antenna Design Using Genetic Swarm Metaheuristic

Plant root imaging is crucial for progress in various domains such as plant breeding and crop optimization. Traditionally, root tomography involves invasive methods that disrupt plant systems and yield non-reproducible results. As a result, non-invasive techniques, particularly electrical tomography...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of advanced computational intelligence and intelligent informatics Vol. 28; no. 1; pp. 59 - 66
Main Authors Alejandrino, Jonnel D., Concepcion II, Ronnie S., Bandala, Argel A., Sybingco, Edwin, Vicerra, Ryan Rhay P., Dadios, Elmer P.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Tokyo Fuji Technology Press Co. Ltd 01.01.2024
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN1343-0130
1883-8014
1883-8014
DOI10.20965/jaciii.2024.p0059

Cover

More Information
Summary:Plant root imaging is crucial for progress in various domains such as plant breeding and crop optimization. Traditionally, root tomography involves invasive methods that disrupt plant systems and yield non-reproducible results. As a result, non-invasive techniques, particularly electrical tomography, have gained significant attention. Despite the advantages, these techniques have limitations in terms of radiation efficiency and directivity due to suboptimal antenna design. This paper presents a comprehensive simulation on antenna design optimization focusing on dimensions, spacing, and integration of advanced algorithms. A micropatch transducer antenna was engineered for an existing in-silico plant root setup operating within a 3–5 MHz frequency range. The optimized dimensions of the antenna are 109.32 mm × 140.67 mm × 2.55 mm, and it resonates effectively within a frequency range of 3.1–5.68 MHz. Using scalar minimization techniques, patch transducers were interconnected into an antenna array with an optimized 3 mm spacing. Utilizing multi-objective optimization algorithm based on sperm fertilization procedure and shuffled frog leaping algorithm, optimal frequencies were obtained at 3,989,796.88 Hz and 3,989,951.83 Hz, respectively. Validated using CADFEKO software, the proposed antenna design demonstrated distinctive voltage distribution, superior directivity of 9.24 dBi, gain of 9.15 dBi, and 98.6% radiation efficiency when compared to the existing silicon-based root tomography antenna setups.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 14
ISSN:1343-0130
1883-8014
1883-8014
DOI:10.20965/jaciii.2024.p0059