Pilot study on deploying a wireless sensor-based virtual-key access and lock system for home and industrial frontiers

Authors

  • Andrew Okonji Eboka Federal College of Education (Technical) Author
  • Fidelis Obukohwo Aghware University of Delta Agbor Author
  • Margaret Dumebi Okpor Delta State University of Science and Technology Author
  • Christopher Chukufunaya Odiakaose Dennis Osadebay University Author
  • Ejaita Abugor Okpako University of Delta Agbor Author
  • Arnold Adimabua Ojugo University of Petroleum Resources Effurun Author
  • Rita Erhovwo Ako University of Petroleum Resources Effurun Author
  • Amaka Patience Binitie Federal College of Education (Technical) Author
  • Innocent Sunny Onyemenem Federal College of Education (Technical) Author
  • Patrick Ogholuwarami Ejeh University of Petroleum Resources Effurun Author
  • Victor Ochuko Geteloma University of Petroleum Resources Effurun Author

Keywords:

Door access automation, Home security, Internet of things, Virtual key lock, Wireless sensor network

Abstract

The rise in data processing activities vis-à-vis the consequent rise in adoption and adaptation of information and communication tech related approaches to resolve societal challenges has become both critical and imperative. Virtualization have become the order of the day to bridge various lapses of human mundane tasks and endeavors. Its positive impacts on society cannot be underestimated. This study advances a virtual wireless sensor-based key-card access system with cost-effective solution to manage access to restricted areas within a facility. We seek to integrate virtual key card access, web-access control, solenoid lock integration, and ESP32- controller to create a dependable internet of things (IoT)-enabled access control system. Results show system benefit includes improved security, improved convenience, privacy, efficiency with real-time control capabilities that will allows building administrators to track and manage access to the facility remotely.

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Published

2026-02-09

Issue

Section

Articles