SMART GEYSER
A SMART TOUCH TO A TRADITIONAL APPLIANCE
SUBMITTED BY: SIDDHANT SINHA(08670104910) MENTOR: Mrs. NEHA GUPTA
DEVANSH SINGH(08570104910)
SHITIJ BATHLA(09470104910)
B.TECH E.E.E 4TH YEAR
INTRODUCTION
In this project a traditional geyser is transformed to a smart one with addition of
features
Temperature controller
Alarm(triggered on reaching the required temperature)
Time required to heat water
Remote control (ON/OFF/TEMPERATURE CONTROL)
The smart geyser will have fixed temperature settings according to different uses. It
will only heat the water up to that temperature and it will remain up to that point
even when power supply is on.
The smart geyser will have pressure sensor to check the inflow of water and will turn
off the geyser if there is no inflow.
It will tell us that after how much time the water will get heated up to the set
temperature and will buzz or alarm us when the water is heated.
We can control the geyser remotely.
BLOCK DIAGRAM
RECEIVER CIRCUIT
7805
1000µF 10µF
LM35
7805 +12v
220v
Rx
Geyser
x
Tx
REMOTE CIRCUIT
7805
+9v
Rx +
Tx
WORKING
A water heater's thermostat controls the temperature of the water inside the tank. Normally,
you can set the temperature anywhere between 120 and 180 degrees Fahrenheit (49 to 82
degrees Celsius). The water temperature setting recommended by most manufacturers is
between 120 to 140 degrees Fahrenheit (49 to 60 degrees Celsius). This is hot enough to be
efficient for household use, but not so hot that it can pose a scalding risk.
The dip tube feeds cold water from your home's water lines to the bottom of the tank's
interior, where the water starts to warm up. The heating mechanism, either a burner or an
element, stays on until the water reaches temperature. As the water heats, it rises to the top
of the tank. The heat-out pipe is located near the top of the tank. Water exiting the water
heater at the top is always the hottest in the tank at any given moment because it's the nature
of hot water to rise above denser, cold water.
The secret to a water heater's design for separating cold, incoming water from hot, outgoing
water is that it relies on the principle that heat rises to do the hard part. The position of the
heat-out pipe at the top of the tank does the rest.
ADVANTAGES
• Energy saving.
• Time saving.
• Safety.
• Automatic functioning.
• Better utilization of resources.
THE END