Design of an Electrostatic Spraying Agricultural UAV with Millimeter-Wave Radar Obstacle Avoidance

Traditional pest control methods face significant limitations in adaptability due to terrain constraints and crop variations. Our agricultural drone integrates electrostatic spraying technology and millimeter-wave radar to overcome these challenges. This innovation substantially reduces pesticide drift—a critical environmental concern—while enhancing operational efficiency and precision in modern farming operations.

Global Research Status of Agricultural UAVs

Agricultural drones benefit from strong policy support in domestic markets, with subsidies increasing accessibility. Current market penetration reaches 18% in major agricultural regions, though limitations persist:

Region Advancements Technical Challenges
Domestic Government subsidy programs Short endurance, limited payload, wind-induced drift
International Precision spraying, autonomous path planning, multi-sensor integration Cost reduction, environmental impact minimization, adoption barriers

Structural Design Innovations

Our agricultural UAV features a six-rotor configuration optimized for stability and efficiency. The arch-structured frame distributes aerodynamic loads according to:

$$F_{dist} = \frac{F_{total}}{n \cdot \cos\theta}$$

Where \(F_{total}\) denotes total aerodynamic force, \(n\) represents load-bearing nodes, and \(\theta\) is the arch curvature angle. This design achieves 22% better wind resistance compared to quadcopter configurations while maintaining 15% higher energy efficiency than octocopter platforms. Modular components enable rapid field maintenance, reducing downtime by 40%.

Millimeter-Wave Radar System

The agricultural drone’s 77GHz millimeter-wave radar detects obstacles through frequency-modulated continuous wave (FMCW) technology. Signal processing follows:

$$d = \frac{c \cdot \Delta t}{2}, \quad v = \frac{f_d \cdot c}{2f_0}$$

Where \(d\) is obstacle distance, \(v\) is relative velocity, \(c\) is light speed, \(f_0\) is carrier frequency (77 GHz), and \(f_d\) is Doppler shift. System specifications include:

Parameter Value Benefit
Detection Range 0.2-30m Accurate obstacle mapping
Resolution 4cm Precise navigation
Update Rate 20Hz Real-time response

For radar system details, see: nan

Electrostatic Spraying Technology

Our induction-charging system applies 15kV to pesticide droplets, creating electrostatic adhesion governed by:

$$F_e = \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_0} \cdot \frac{q_1 q_2}{r^2}$$

Where \(F_e\) is electrostatic force, \(\epsilon_0\) is permittivity, \(q\) represents charges, and \(r\) is droplet-target distance. This improves deposition efficiency by 30% compared to conventional systems. Droplet size critically influences drift:

Classification VMD (μm) Drift Potential
Fine Mist 100-200 High
Medium Spray 201-400 Moderate
Coarse Spray >400 Low

Dual fan nozzles generate 220μm VMD droplets—optimized for minimal drift and maximum adhesion. The electrostatic system reduces pesticide usage by 20% while increasing leaf underside coverage by 45%.

Prototype Performance

Field tests with the agricultural UAV (dimensions: 0.55×0.5×0.4m, payload: 10kg) demonstrated:

$$Drift\, Reduction = \frac{C_{std} – C_{es}}{C_{std}} \times 100\% = 78\%$$

Where \(C_{std}\) and \(C_{es}\) represent drift concentrations for standard and electrostatic systems respectively. Key metrics:

Parameter Result
Operational Endurance 15 minutes/cycle
Positioning Accuracy <1.5m deviation
Coverage Efficiency 2.5 acres/hour

The agricultural drone maintained stable flight at 3m altitude during 6m/s crosswinds, with millimeter-wave radar enabling 100% obstacle avoidance success.

Conclusion

This agricultural UAV integrates three transformative technologies: electrostatic deposition minimizes environmental contamination, millimeter-wave radar ensures operational safety, and the arch-frame enhances aerodynamic stability. Such innovations advance precision agriculture by reducing chemical usage by 20-30% while increasing effective crop coverage by 40%. Future agricultural drones will increasingly incorporate these technologies to support sustainable food production systems globally.

Scroll to Top