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Field installation of piezometric sensors often involves uncertainty regarding correct placement, sensor response, and agreement with manually measured static water levels. Commercial dataloggers provide high-resolution monitoring but do not offer installation-stage validation or open access to communication protocols. To address this gap, the ESPiezometer was developed as a low-cost, open-source device based on an ESP32-C3 microcontroller with RS485 Modbus communication, on-board water level calculation, temperature-based density correction, and Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) integration for field data logging via an Android application. The hardware enables real-time verification of raw and corrected water level readings during deployment and allows immediate comparison with manual measurements. A custom PCB and 3D-printed enclosure were designed to facilitate reproducible assembly and portability. Field validation in a groundwater observation well (30-90 m depth range) demonstrated consistent communication integrity via CRC checks and measurement repeatability with a standard deviation below 0.03 m. After density correction, measurement error was reduced by 35-50% relative to manual reference levels. The obtained results demonstrate that the ESPiezometer can serve as a reliable companion instrument, reducing uncertainty during deployment and improving confidence in long-term groundwater monitoring campaigns.
Blanco-Jáquez et al. (Sun,) studied this question.