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Tutorial: Reading Water Flow rate with Water Flow Sensor

2020-05-31 07:30:30 admin

Tutorial: Reading Water Flow rate with Water Flow Sensor

This is part of a project I have been working on and I thought I would share it here since there have been a few threads on how to read water flow rate in liters per hour using the Water Flow Sensor found in the Seeed Studio Depo. It uses a simple rotating wheel that pulses a hall effect sensor. By reading these pulses and implementing a little math, we can read the liquids flow rate accurate to within 3%. The threads are simple G1/2 so finding barbed ends will not be that hard. 

 

 

You will need 

 Arduino

Water Flow Sensor

10K resistor

 

Wiring up the Water Flow Sensor is pretty simple. There are 3 wires: Black, Red, and Yellow. 

Black to the Seeeduino's ground pin

Red to Seeeduino's 5v pin

The yellow wire will need to be connected to a 10k pull up resistor.and then to pin 2 on the Seeeduino.

 

Here is a fritzing diagram I made to show you how to wire it all up. 

Image

Once you have it wired up you will need to upload the following code to your Seeeduino. Once it is uploaded and you have some fluid flowing through the Water Flow Sensor, you can open the serial monitor and it will display the flow rate, refreshing every second. 

Here is the code

// reading liquid flow rate using Seeeduino and Water Flow Sensor from Seeedstudio.com
// Code adapted by Charles Gantt from PC Fan RPM code written by Crenn @thebestcasescenario.com
// http:/themakersworkbench.com http://thebestcasescenario.com http://seeedstudio.com

volatile int NbTopsFan; //measuring the rising edges of the signal
int Calc;                               
int hallsensor = 2;    //The pin location of the sensor

void rpm ()     //This is the function that the interupt calls 

  NbTopsFan++;  //This function measures the rising and falling edge of the 

hall effect sensors signal

// The setup() method runs once, when the sketch starts
void setup() //

  pinMode(hallsensor, INPUT); //initializes digital pin 2 as an input
  Serial.begin(9600); //This is the setup function where the serial port is 

initialised,
  attachInterrupt(0, rpm, RISING); //and the interrupt is attached

// the loop() method runs over and over again,
// as long as the Arduino has power
void loop ()    
{
  NbTopsFan = 0;   //Set NbTops to 0 ready for calculations
  sei();      //Enables interrupts
  delay (1000);   //Wait 1 second
  cli();      //Disable interrupts
  Calc = (NbTopsFan * 60 / 7.5); //(Pulse frequency x 60) / 7.5Q, = flow rate 

in L/hour 
  Serial.print (Calc, DEC); //Prints the number calculated above
  Serial.print (" L/hourrn"); //Prints "L/hour" and returns a  new line
}

 


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