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Development of Incubator Analyzer Based on Computer with Temperature And Humidity Parameters
Author(s) -
Syarifatul Ainiyah,
Dwi Herry Andayani,
Andjar Pundji,
Mounir Shaib
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of electronics, electromedical engineering, and medical informatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2656-8632
DOI - 10.35882/jeeemi.v2i2.3
Subject(s) - incubator , thermocouple , humidity , calibration , spectrum analyzer , bluetooth , temperature measurement , materials science , personal computer , computer science , computer hardware , electrical engineering , engineering , mathematics , statistics , operating system , physics , quantum mechanics , microbiology and biotechnology , wireless , biology , thermodynamics
Opening and closing an infant incubator during calibration can cause temperature leaks such as a decrease in the incubator temperature. The purpose of this study is to make the tool "Development Incubator Analyzer appear PC and Non-PC with Temperature and Humidity parameters" with Bluetooth HC05 delivery for Personal Computer display in the form of numbers and temperature graphs. Whereas for non-PCs displayed on a 20x4 LCD with SD Card storage. The contribution of this research is to be able to calibrate baby incubators without a decrease in temperature and monitoring data collection at a maximum distance of 10 meters. To avoid a decrease in temperature, the module is displayed on the Personal Computer and storage on the SD Card. Incubator Analyzer is designed to simplify and facilitate calibration with temperature parameters at 5 points using a DS18B20 sensor, mat temperature using a K type thermocouple and humidity using a DHT22 sensor. In the temperature setting of 34 C and 36 C, the average error result is -4.87% for DS18B20, -7.39% error for mattress temperature, and -24.80% for humidity sensor. Data generated from comparisons using the INCU II test conclude that the measurement results between modules and standard devices have large differences in values. The results of this study can be implemented on baby incubators to increase the appropriateness of the device.

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