A LiDAR Sensor-Based Spray Boom Height Detection Method and the Corresponding Experimental Validation

Sensors (Basel). 2021 Mar 17;21(6):2107. doi: 10.3390/s21062107.

Abstract

Sprayer boom height (Hb) variations affect the deposition and distribution of droplets. An Hb control system is used to adjust Hb to maintain an optimum distance between the boom and the crop canopy, and an Hb detection sensor is a key component of the Hb control system. This study presents a new, low-cost light detection and ranging (LiDAR) sensor for Hb detection developed based on the principle of single-point ranging. To examine the detection performance of the LiDAR sensor, a step height detection experiment, a field ground detection experiment, and a wheat stubble (WS) height detection experiment as well as a comparison with an ultrasonic sensor were performed. The results showed that the LiDAR sensor could be used to detect Hb. When used to detect the WS height (HWS), the LiDAR sensor primarily detected the WS roots and the inside of the WS canopy. HWS and movement speed of the LiDAR sensor (VLiDAR) has a greater impact on the detection performance of the LiDAR sensor for the WS canopy than that for the WS roots. The detection error of the LiDAR sensor for the WS roots is less than 5.00%, and the detection error of the LiDAR sensor for the WS canopy is greater than 8.00%. The detection value from the LiDAR sensor to the WS root multiplied by 1.05 can be used as a reference basis for adjusting Hb, and after the WS canopy height is added to the basis, the value can be used as an index for adjusting Hb in WS field spraying. The results of this study will promote research on the boom height detection method and autonomous Hb control system.

Keywords: K-means clustering; boom height control; boom sprayer; wheat stubble; wheat stubble root.