TY - GEN
T1 - A holistic approach to decentralized structural damage localization using wireless sensor networks
AU - Hackmann, Gregory
AU - Sun, Fei
AU - Castaneda, Nestor
AU - Lu, Chenyang
AU - Dyke, Shirley
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) have become an increasingly compelling platform for Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) applications, since they can be installed relatively inexpensively onto existing infrastructure. Existing approaches to SHM in WSNs typically address computing system issues or structural engineering techniques, but not both in conjunction. In this paper, we propose a holistic approach to SHM that integrates a decentralized computing architecture with the Damage Localization Assurance Criterion algorithm. In contrast to centralized approaches that require transporting large amounts of sensor data to a base station, our system pushes the execution of portions of the damage localization algorithm onto the sensor nodes, reducing communication costs by an order of magnitude in exchange for moderate additional processing on each sensor. We present a prototype implementation of this system built using the TinyOS operating system running on the Intel Imote2 sensor network platform. Experiments conducted using two different physical structures demonstrate our system's ability to accurately localize structural damage. We also demonstrate that our decentralized approach reduces latency by 64.8% and energy consumption by 69.5% compared to a typical centralized solution, achieving a projected lifetime of 191 days using three standard AAA batteries. Our work demonstrates the advantages of a holistic approach to cyber-physical systems that closely integrates the design of computing systems and physical engineering techniques.
AB - Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) have become an increasingly compelling platform for Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) applications, since they can be installed relatively inexpensively onto existing infrastructure. Existing approaches to SHM in WSNs typically address computing system issues or structural engineering techniques, but not both in conjunction. In this paper, we propose a holistic approach to SHM that integrates a decentralized computing architecture with the Damage Localization Assurance Criterion algorithm. In contrast to centralized approaches that require transporting large amounts of sensor data to a base station, our system pushes the execution of portions of the damage localization algorithm onto the sensor nodes, reducing communication costs by an order of magnitude in exchange for moderate additional processing on each sensor. We present a prototype implementation of this system built using the TinyOS operating system running on the Intel Imote2 sensor network platform. Experiments conducted using two different physical structures demonstrate our system's ability to accurately localize structural damage. We also demonstrate that our decentralized approach reduces latency by 64.8% and energy consumption by 69.5% compared to a typical centralized solution, achieving a projected lifetime of 191 days using three standard AAA batteries. Our work demonstrates the advantages of a holistic approach to cyber-physical systems that closely integrates the design of computing systems and physical engineering techniques.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/67249115743
U2 - 10.1109/RTSS.2008.40
DO - 10.1109/RTSS.2008.40
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:67249115743
SN - 9780769534770
T3 - Proceedings - Real-Time Systems Symposium
SP - 35
EP - 46
BT - Proceedings - 2008 Real-Time Systems Symposium, RTSS 2008
T2 - 2008 Real-Time Systems Symposium, RTSS 2008
Y2 - 30 November 2008 through 3 December 2008
ER -