October 10, 2004
Troy, N.Y. — Tarek Abdoun, assistant professor of civil and
environmental engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
and associate director of Rensselaer’s Geotechnical Centrifuge
Research Center, is leading a team of scientists to develop a
wireless sensor designed to warn against geotechnical hazards
such as earthquakes, landslides, and floods. The project is
funded in part by the National Science Foundation.
“Recent advances in sensors and wireless networking
technologies provide opportunities for new ways to detect and
assess the impact of natural disasters,” said Abdoun. “The new
system is designed to enable a better understanding of ground
failure mechanisms and has the potential to significantly
reduce losses from natural disasters.”
Abdoun describes the sensor as a long rope about one inch in
diameter consisting of various sensors and packed into
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) piping. The system is water-resistant
and can be inserted into the ground up to 30 meters. The
advanced sensor uses fiber-optic and
micro-electro-mechanical-system (MEMS) technologies to
simultaneously measure key indicators of impending ground
failure – ground deformation and soil acceleration. Each sensor
is connected to a wireless node to enable real-time monitoring,
as well as remote sensor configuration.
“Real-time monitoring would allow for early detection and
warning of geotechnical hazards, such as landslides, and help
facilitate evacuations,” said Abdoun.
According to Abdoun, real-time remote monitoring could replace
manual sensors used by many state and federal agencies and
eliminate the need to physically visit each site to take
measurements and readings. The traditional manual systems
provide limited monitoring capability — sensing acceleration or
deformation readings, not both — and prove to be expensive,
said Abdoun. Initial estimates indicate the new prototype would
cost less than one-tenth of traditional sensors.
The research team includes Alhussein Abouzeid, assistant
professor of electrical, computer, and systems engineering, and
Mourad Zeghal, assistant professor of civil and environmental
engineering at Rensselaer
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and California’s Department
of Transportation are sponsoring the field implementation
effort of Rensselaer’s new system at four different
sites.
The new system was recently tested at the National Research
Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Prevention in Tsukuba,
Japan, home of the world’s largest shake table for earthquake
simulation. “Our initial test results are very promising,” said
Abdoun.
The research team also plans to use the data to create
computer-generated model simulations for research and
education.
The team’s work was recently featured in the September 2004
edition of Civil Engineering, the magazine of the
American Society of Civil Engineers.
Contact: Mary Cimo
Phone: (518) 687-7174
E-mail: cimom@rpi.edu