ShakeNet: A portable wireless sensor network for instrumenting large civil structures
Abstract
We report our findings from a U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program-funded project to develop and test a wireless, portable, strong-motion network of up to 40 triaxial accelerometers for structural health monitoring. The overall goal of the project was to record ambient vibrations for several days from USGS-instrumented structures. Structural health monitoring has important applications in fields like civil engineering and the study of earthquakes. The emergence of wireless sensor networks provides a promising means to such applications. However, while most wireless sensor networks are still in the experimentation stage, very few take into consideration the realistic earthquake engineering application requirements. To collect comprehensive data for structural health monitoring for civil engineers, high-resolution vibration sensors and sufficient sampling rates should be adopted, which makes it challenging for current wireless sensor network technology in the following ways: processing capabilities, storage limit, and communication bandwidth. The wireless sensor network has to meet expectations set by wired sensor devices prevalent in the structural health monitoring community. For this project, we built and tested an application-realistic, commercially based, portable, wireless sensor network called ShakeNet for instrumentation of large civil structures, especially for buildings, bridges, or dams after earthquakes. Two to three people can deploy ShakeNet sensors within hours after an earthquake to measure the structural response of the building or bridge during aftershocks. ShakeNet involved the development of a new sensing platform (ShakeBox) running a software suite for networking, data collection, and monitoring. Deployments reported here on a tall building and a large dam were real-world tests of ShakeNet operation, and helped to refine both hardware and software.
Acknowledgement
This work was funded by U.S. Geological Survey National Earthquakes Hazards Reduction Program Award Numbers G09AP00101 and G09AP00102. We acknowledge intellectual support from the Reftek engineers who were involved at every level of these development efforts. We are also grateful for reviews from John Evans and Tat Fu and editing by Jessica Dyke that greatly strengthened this report.
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Published - Kohler_etal_OFR_20151134.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 64355
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20160209-161259545
- USGS
- G09AP00101
- USGS
- G09AP00102
- Available
-
2015-08-03First posted online
- Series Name
- U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report
- Series Volume or Issue Number
- 2015–1134
- Publication Status
- Published