+ All Categories
Home > Documents > BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant...

BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant...

Date post: 12-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: ada-lorin-weaver
View: 220 times
Download: 2 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
45
BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur http://home.iitk.ac.in/~chebrolu
Transcript
Page 1: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway

Bridge Monitoring

Kameswari ChebroluAssistant Professor

Department of Electrical Engineering

IIT Kanpur

http://home.iitk.ac.in/~chebrolu

Page 2: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

People

Kameswari Chebrolu Bhaskaran Raman Nilesh Mishra Hemanth Haridas Phani Kumar Valiveti Raj Kumar

Page 3: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Motivation Indian Railways consists

of 1,20,000 bridges spread over a large geographical area

Many in weak and distressed conditions 57% are over 80 years old

An automated system to track bridge's health is of utmost importance. Short term monitoring Long term monitoring

Page 4: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Existing Techniques

Mostly wired solutions Equipment is bulky and very expensive Large setup time (few days) for short-term

monitoring Few wireless solutions

WISDEN (UCLA) Continuous monitoring

Golden-gate bridge (UCB) Short-term monitoring

Page 5: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Problem Statement

Develop an easy to deploy, low maintenance and long-term structural health monitoring system for Railway bridges

Easy to deploy: Huge number of bridges to monitor Low maintenance: Technical expertise is difficult to get Long-term: Useful to monitor a structure's health over time

Page 6: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Application Requirements

What to measure? Acceleration in 3-axis of motion Frequency components of interest 0.25-20Hz

How long to measure? Forced vibrations: 20sec; Free vibrations: 20sec

Time Synchronization Necessary only across node in a span Need accuracy of 5ms

30-125m 3-axis accelerometers

Page 7: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Implications of Requirements

2km bridge can have as many as 200 sensors 6 nodes per span; 60m span

Data collection duration: 40sec Data generated by a node: 3 channels * 12 bits *

40 Hz * 40 sec = 57.6kbits Maximum data from a data span (12 nodes):

691.2kbits Maximum data generated by the sensors on the

bridge: 1.44 MBytes

Page 8: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Solution Approach

Battery operated wireless sensor motes Cheap alternative Easy to deploy and maintain

Eliminates hassle of laying cable to route data/power

No solar panels Expensive and prone to theft Sensors maybe placed under deck in shade

Key Goal: Minimize energy consumption

Page 9: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Hardware Details Sensor mote: Tmote-Sky

8 Mhz MSP430 processor 250kbps 2.4Ghz radio

complaint with 802.15.4 MEMS based ADXL 203

accelerometer Dual axis Range is +/- 1.7g Sensitivity 1000mv/g

8dBi Omni Antenna

Page 10: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Challenges

Event Detection Cannot predict train arrival To conserve power, sensor nodes have to

duty-cycle (sleep + wake cycle) Remote Access

Bridges may not have network coverage to transfer data to central server

Scalability Can have as many as 200 sensors per bridge Protocols and architecture needs to be

scalable

Page 11: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Outline

Motivation Application Requirements Challenges Overview of Architecture Event Detection Data Transfer Measurements on a Bridge Conclusions

Page 12: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Architecture Overview

12

3

45

6

Span

3

12

5

6

4

1 Cluster heads

Channel 3

Channel 5

Channel 3

Channel 5

Piers

Event Signaling module (Channel 1)

Clusters

Data Transport modules

Data span as an independent network Each cluster operates on a different channel

Page 13: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

12

3

45

6

3

12

5

6

4

Channel 3

Channel 5

Topology Formation

Page 14: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

12

3

45

6

3

12

5

6

4

Channel 3

Channel 5

Time Synchronization

Page 15: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

12

3

45

6

3

12

5

6

4

Sleep-Wakeup

Channel 1

Channel 3

Channel 5

Page 16: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

12

3

45

6

3

12

5

6

4

Train Arrival Detection

Command Control: Wakeup

Page 17: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

12

3

45

6

3

12

5

6

4

Vibration Sensing

Page 18: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

12

3

45

6

3

12

5

6

4

Data Gathering by individual cluster heads

Channel 3

Channel 5

Page 19: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

12

3

45

6

3

12

5

6

4

Sleep-Wakeup

Channel 1

Channel 3

Channel 5

Page 20: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

12

3

45

6

3

12

5

6

4

Train Detection Data Uploading

Page 21: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

12

3

45

6

3

12

5

6

4

Sleep-Wakeup

Page 22: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Send Data to Repository

Page 23: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

BriMon Architecture: Event Detection

Span

Head node

Dd

T dc=DdV

P

Page 24: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

BriMon Architecture: Event Detection

Span

Head node

Dd

T dc=DdV

P

Page 25: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

BriMon Architecture: Event Detection

Span

Head node

Dd

T dc=DdV

P

Page 26: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

BriMon Architecture: Event Detection

Span

Head node

Page 27: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Event Detection: Analysis Question: What should be the

duration of sleep and wake up? Tdc = max time available between

detection of oncoming train and data collection

Tcc = sleep/wakeup cycle = Tsl + Tw

Tw = Tdet + Tcd + Tpc (at head mote)

Tdet: Time taken to detect the train

Tcd : Maximum clock drift

Tpc : Time taken for command propogation

Page 28: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Event Detection

Tw = 2*Tcd + Tpc (at non-head mote) Ans: Tdc = Tcc + Tw = Tsl + 2Tw

Page 29: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Radio Range Measurements

Tdc = D/V D is found to be

about 400m with 8dBi omni-antenna for various speeds

At 80kmph, Tdc = 36s

Use of 802.11 extends

range to 800m Frontier Nodes

Page 30: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Time Synchronization Tw is function of Tdet & Tcd & Tpc

Tsl = Tdc - 2* Tw

Tpc : We use same protocol for synchronization as well as command issue Flooding with multiple retransmissions (3) Tpc turns out to be about 72ms Error in synchronization is 0.18ms

Page 31: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Time Synchronization

Calculating Tcd

Worst case clock drift in 36 sec is 20ppm Synchronization error is 0.31ms Tcd = 36s * 20 * 10^-6 (0.72) + 0.18 = 0.9ms

Tcd << Tpc ; Tdet ~ 50ms;

Tw ~ 125ms; Tsl ~ 36–0.25 = 35.75;

Duty Cycling ~ 0.3%

Page 32: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Data Transfer

Long distance wireless links infeasible 2km bridge with 200 sensors generate 1.5MB

data Transfer to single hop over 10-20 hops presents

scalability problems Data transfer time for 14 node network is 5 min

Reference: “A Wireless Sensor Network for Structural Health Monitoring: Performance and Experience”, EmNetS-II, May 2005

Page 33: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Data Transfer: Our Approach

Use multiple channels; one for each data span Data across spans independent At most 12 nodes per span; very scalable Adjacent channels are 7 spans apart with 16

available channels Transfer data of the span motes to the head

mote Transfer data from head mote to train

Page 34: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Data Transfer

C3 C5 C7 C9

Head Mote

3

6

52 41

Page 35: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Data Transfer within Span:Routing Issues

Links are very stable in our setting Reference: “Implications of Link Range

and (In)Stability on Sensor Network Architecture”, WINTECH 2006

Any simple protocol can be used Centralized 2 Phase routing Average duration of routing for 6 nodes :

567ms

Page 36: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Routing Protocol: An Example

2

4

1 3

6

5

(a) Cluster of six nodes

2

4

1 3

6

5

(b) Neighbourhood Discovery

2

4

1 3

6

5

(c) Nodes 2,3 & 4 are good neighbours to node 1

2

4

1 3

6

5

(d) Node 6 is a good neighbour to node3, node 5 has no good neighbour

2

4

1 3

6

5

(e) Node 5 is a bad neighbour to node 3

2

4

1 3

6

5

(f) Dispatch Tree information

Page 37: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Data Transfer within Span: Transport Protocol

Transport protocol Transfers data from the motes to the head mote NACK based block transfer

HEAD Mote NODE-2

FLASH

NODE-3 NODE-4

FLASHCMD Data TFR

CMD Data ACK

CMD Data TFR

CMD Data ACK

CMD Data TFR

CMD Data ACK

Block Data TFR

Block Data ACK

Block Data TFR

Block Data ACK

Block Data TFR

Block Data ACK

Page 38: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Single Hop Data Transfer

Page 39: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Mobile Data Transfer Achievable data transfer rate using block

transfer transport protocol on hardware is 46kbps (tested on field)

Max data per data span is 693Kbits (12 nodes) Contact duration required is 15sec

Contact Range required = contact duration * speed of train

Head node

Contact Range = D

Page 40: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Throughput Considerations

Contact range required for data transfer is 330m at train speed of 80kmph 250m at train speed of 60kmph

Our measurements give a contact range of 400m (one-side)

Transfer is possible with enough leeway. Throughput can be further increased via

Compression Multiple receivers at head and rear of train Better Hardware

Simultaneous operation of flash and radio Bluetooth Radio (1Mbps)

Page 41: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Lifetime Estimate Can achieve 1.5 year of operation using a

2500mAH battery

131s 33s 15s

36s

Page 42: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Measurements on a Bridge

Omni antenna

Page 43: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Measurements on a BridgeSink Mote

Page 44: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Data Analysis Tool

Page 45: BRIMON: Wireless Sensor Network based Railway Bridge Monitoring Kameswari Chebrolu Assistant Professor Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Kanpur.

Conclusions Application specific design

Extensive measurement study Novelty of our contributions

Event detection mechanism Mobile data transfer Integration with

time-synchronization/routing Estimates indicate network can operate

without intervention for 1 1/2 years


Recommended