Multi-band UWB sensor networks for high density sub-surface diagnostic
Article 2010 English
Authors
IL
I. L'Abbate
SS
Stefano Savazzi
LG
Leonardo Goratti
Abstract
1 min read
Acquisition systems for sub-surface diagnostic (e.g., earthquake monitoring) require large number of sensors (geo-phones or accelerometers) to be deployed outdoor over large areas (tens of sqkm) to measure backscattered wave fields that are collected into a storage/processing unit (sink node). Aggregated data sets are analyzed to obtain an image of the sub-surface, monitor seismic activity, and declare possible alarm conditions. Cable based connectivity is the bottleneck of current systems, in terms of power consumption and degradation in accuracy. Replacing cables with wireless is now becoming attractive to improve the monitoring quality and reduce the probability of false negatives. Strict sampling synchronization constraint over large geographic areas, high precision sensor localization, high data-rate, and low delay are all topics that call for a scalable network system: Multi-Band Ultra Wide-Band radio transmissions (MB-UWB) play a key role as the only viable technology. This paper introduces the system and UWB network architecture based on ECMA-368 standard, moreover it provides a novel analytical tool to evaluate the energy consumption and delay during network set-up.
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