• Title/Summary/Keyword: Onboard Sensors

Search Result 42, Processing Time 0.023 seconds

Development of Modeling Method of Hysteretic Characteristics for Accurate Load Measurement of Trucks (상용차량의 정확한 하중 측정을 위한 겹판스프링의 이력특성 모델링 기법 개발)

  • Seo, M.K.;Batbayar, E.;Shin, H.Y.;Lee, H.Y.;Ko, J.I.
    • Journal of Drive and Control
    • /
    • v.18 no.2
    • /
    • pp.38-45
    • /
    • 2021
  • In recent years, the demand for an onboard scale system which can directly monitor load distribution and overload of vehicles has increased. Depending on the suspension type of the vehicle, the onboard scale system could use different types of sensors, such as, angle sensors, pressure sensors, load cells, etc. In the case of a vehicle equipped with leaf spring suspension system, the load of the vehicle is measured by using the deflection or displacement of the leaf spring. Leaf springs have hysteresis characteristics that vary in displacement depending on the load state. These characteristics cause load measurement errors when moving or removing cargoes. Therefore, this study aimed at developing an onboard scale device for cargo vehicles equipped with leaf springs. A sectional modeling method which can reduce measurement errors caused by hysteresis characteristics was also proposed.

Aircraft Load Monitoring System Development & Application to Ground Tests Using Optical Fiber Sensors (광섬유 센서를 사용한 항공기용 하중 모니터링 시스템 개발과 지상시험 적용)

  • Park, Chan Yik;Ha, Jae Seok;Kim, Sang Yong
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Aeronautical & Space Sciences
    • /
    • v.45 no.8
    • /
    • pp.639-646
    • /
    • 2017
  • In this paper, a new load monitoring system for military aircraft is introduced. This system consists of sensors, an onboard device and an ground analysis equipment. The sensors and onboard device are mounted on the aircraft and the ground analysis equipment is operated on the ground. Through this system, structural static load can be estimated with flight parameters and structural responses can be measured by sensors due to static load, dynamic load and unexpected events. Especially, optical fiber sensors with mutiplexing capability are utilized. The onboard device was specially designed for complying the requirements of relevant military specifications and was verified through a series of the environment tests. This system was used and evaluated through ground structural tests before flight tests. In the near future, this system will be applied to military aircraft as a structural load monitoring system after flight test evaluation.

Development of Onboard Scales to Measure the Weight of Trucks (상용차량의 하중을 측정하기 위한 탑재형 자중계 개발)

  • Seo, Myoung Kook;Shin, Hee Yong;Lee, Ho Yeon;Ko, Jea Il;Tumenjargal, Enkhbaatar
    • Journal of Drive and Control
    • /
    • v.18 no.1
    • /
    • pp.9-16
    • /
    • 2021
  • Overloaded vehicles increase the maintenance cost of road structures, and they are a major factor in causing damage to the roads and bridges. In addition, overloaded vehicles compromise the braking capability of the vehicle; thus, threatening the safety of the driver. In order to prevent overloading of vehicles, the government is cracking down on the roads by using a device that measures the weight of vehicles. But this process is inconvenient because the place where the equipment is installed is far away from where the cargo is loaded. Due to the limitations of these fixed weighing devices, there is a growing need for technology that can monitor vehicle weight distribution and overload conditions in real time. In this work, we develop an onboard scale that can measure the load (weight) of trucks in real time. The onboard scale consists of high sensors, a signal processing unit, and a display, and it measures the load using height-displacement of the vehicle's leaf spring suspension.

Closed-loop structural control with real-time smart sensors

  • Linderman, Lauren E.;Spencer, Billie F. Jr.
    • Smart Structures and Systems
    • /
    • v.16 no.6
    • /
    • pp.1147-1167
    • /
    • 2015
  • Wireless smart sensors, which have become popular for monitoring applications, are an attractive option for implementing structural control systems, due to their onboard sensing, processing, and communication capabilities. However, wireless smart sensors pose inherent challenges for control, including delays from communication, acquisition hardware, and processing time. Previous research in wireless control, which focused on semi-active systems, has found that sampling rate along with time delays can significantly impact control performance. However, because semi-active systems are guaranteed stable, these issues are typically neglected in the control design. This work achieves active control with smart sensors in an experimental setting. Because active systems are not inherently stable, all the elements of the control loop must be addressed, including data acquisition hardware, processing performance, and control design at slow sampling rates. The sensing hardware is shown to have a significant impact on the control design and performance. Ultimately, the smart sensor active control system achieves comparable performance to the traditional tethered system.

Issues in structural health monitoring employing smart sensors

  • Nagayama, T.;Sim, S.H.;Miyamori, Y.;Spencer, B.F. Jr.
    • Smart Structures and Systems
    • /
    • v.3 no.3
    • /
    • pp.299-320
    • /
    • 2007
  • Smart sensors densely distributed over structures can provide rich information for structural monitoring using their onboard wireless communication and computational capabilities. However, issues such as time synchronization error, data loss, and dealing with large amounts of harvested data have limited the implementation of full-fledged systems. Limited network resources (e.g. battery power, storage space, bandwidth, etc.) make these issues quite challenging. This paper first investigates the effects of time synchronization error and data loss, aiming to clarify requirements on synchronization accuracy and communication reliability in SHM applications. Coordinated computing is then examined as a way to manage large amounts of data.

Development of an Intelligent Security Robot System for Home Surveillance (가정용 지능형 경비 로봇 시스템 개발)

  • Park, Jeong-Ho;Shin, Dong-Gwan;Woo, Chun-Kyu;Kim, Hyung-Chul;Kwon, Yong-Kwan;Choi, Byoung-Wook
    • Journal of Institute of Control, Robotics and Systems
    • /
    • v.13 no.8
    • /
    • pp.810-816
    • /
    • 2007
  • A security robot system named EGIS-SR is a mobile security robot through one of the new growth engine project in robotic industries. It allows home surveillance through an autonomous mobile platform using onboard cameras and wireless security sensors. EGIS-SR has many sensors to allow autonomous navigation, hierarchical control architecture to handle lots of situations in monitoring home surveillance and mighty networks to achieve unmanned security services. EGIS-SR is tightly coupled with a networked security environment, where the information of the robot is remotely connected with the remote cockpit and patrol man. It achieved an intelligent unmanned security service. The robot is a two-wheeled mobile robot and has casters and suspension to overcome a doorsill. The dynamic motion is verified through $ADAMS^{TM}$ simulation. For the main controller, PXA270 based hardware platform based on linux kernel 2.6 is developed. In the linux platform, data handling for various sensors and the localization algorithm are performed. Also, a local path planning algorithm for object avoidance with ultrasonic sensors and localization using $StarGazer^{TM}$ is developed. Finally, for the automatic charging, a docking algorithm with infrared ray system is implemented.

A Study on the Optimization Conditions for the Mounted Cameras on the Unmanned Aerial Vehicles(UAV) for Photogrammetry and Observations (무인비행장치용 측량 및 관측용 탑재 카메라의 최적화 조건 연구)

  • Hee-Woo Lee;Ho-Woong Shon;Tae-Hoon Kim
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Industry Convergence
    • /
    • v.26 no.6_2
    • /
    • pp.1063-1071
    • /
    • 2023
  • Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs, drones) are becoming increasingly useful in a variety of fields. Advances in UAV and camera technology have made it possible to equip them with ultra-high resolution sensors and capture images at low altitudes, which has improved the reliability and classification accuracy of object identification on the ground. The distinctive contribution of this study is the derivation of sensor-specific performance metrics (GRD/GSD), which shows that as the GSD increases with altitude, the GRD value also increases. In this study, we identified the characteristics of various onboard sensors and analysed the image quality (discrimination resolution) of aerial photography results using UAVs, and calculated the shooting conditions to obtain the discrimination resolution required for reading ground objects.

VERTICAL OZONE DENSITY PROFILING BY UV RADIOMETER ONBOARD KSR-III

  • Hwang Seung-Hyun;Kim Jhoon;Lee Soo-Jin;Kim Kwang-Soo;Ji Ki-Man;Shin Myung-Ho;Chung Eui-Seung
    • Bulletin of the Korean Space Science Society
    • /
    • 2004.10b
    • /
    • pp.372-375
    • /
    • 2004
  • The UV radiometer payload was launched successfully from the west coastal area of Korea Peninsula aboard KSR-III on 28, Nov 2002. KSR-III was the Korean third generation sounding rocket and was developed as intermediate step to larger space launch vehicle with liquid propulsion engine system. UV radiometer onboard KSR-III consists of UV and visible band optical phototubes to measure the direct solar attenuation during rocket ascending phase. For UV detection, 4 channel of sensors were installed in electronics payload section and each channel has 255, 290, 310nm center wavelengths, respectively. 450nm channel was used as reference for correction of the rocket attitude during the flight. Transmission characteristics of all channels were calibrated precisely prior to the flight test at the Optical Lab. in KARI (Korea Aerospace Research Institute). During a total of 231s flight time, the onboard data telemetered to the ground station in real time. The ozone column density was calculated by this telemetry raw data. From the calculated column density, the vertical ozone profile over Korea Peninsula was obtained with sensor calibration data. Our results had reasonable agreements compared with various observations such as ground Umkhr measurement at Yonsei site, ozonesonde at Pohang site, and satellite measurements of HALOE and POAM. The sensitivity analysis of retrieval algorithm for parameters was performed and it was provided that significant error sources of the retrieval algorithm.

  • PDF

Design of the protocol for reporting sensor data on passenger ship (여객선 센서 및 장비 정보 전송을 위한 ASM 설계)

  • Kim, Kil-Yong;Jo, Gi-Jong;Lee, Seo-Jeong
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Navigation and Port Research Conference
    • /
    • 2016.05a
    • /
    • pp.62-63
    • /
    • 2016
  • A variety of sensors and equipment are installed on passenger ships. Data collection from these sensors and associated equipment is required for the safe navigation and behavior analysis of ships, but when the ship sails out of the area where it is not possible to use the LTE communication, other types of networks have to be able to support to transmit these information. such as AIS, satellite communication and MF/HF. In this paper, we survey data protocol of onboard sensors and design ASM messages to transfer sensor data on board to the shore-side system.

  • PDF

IRI estimation using analysis of dynamic tire pressure and axle acceleration

  • Zhao, Yubo;McDaniel, J. Gregory;Wang, Ming L.
    • Smart Structures and Systems
    • /
    • v.19 no.2
    • /
    • pp.151-161
    • /
    • 2017
  • A new method is developed to estimate road profile in order to estimate IRI based on the ASTM standard. This method utilizes an accelerometer and a Dynamic Tire Pressure Sensor (DTPS) to estimate road roughness. The accelerometer measures the vertical axle acceleration. The DTPS, which is mounted on the tire's valve stem, measures dynamic pressure inside the tire while driving. Calibrated transfer functions are used to estimate road profile using the signals from the two sensors. A field test was conducted on roads with different quality conditions in the city of Brockton, MA. The IRI values estimated with this new method match the actual road conditions measured with Pavement Condition Index (PCI) based on the ASTM standard, images taken from an onboard camera and passengers' perceptions. IRI has negative correlation with PCI in general since they have overlapping features. Compared to the current method of IRI measurement, the advantage of this method is that a) the cost is reduced; b) more space is saved; c) more time is saved; and d) mounting the two sensors are universally compatible to most cars and vans. Therefore, this method has the potential to provide continuous and global monitoring the health of roadways.