Enhancing In-Situ Structural Health Monitoring through RF Energy-Powered Sensor Nodes and Mobile Platform
Yu Luo, Lina Pu, Jun Wang, Isaac Howard

TL;DR
This paper presents RF energy-powered sensor nodes embedded in concrete for long-term structural health monitoring, utilizing active and passive communication methods to enable cost-effective, wireless, and reliable data transmission in challenging environments.
Contribution
It introduces a novel RF energy harvesting approach for embedded sensors with optimized active and passive communication schemes for concrete SHM applications.
Findings
Active RF-SN transmits over 1 KB data in 10 seconds at 32.5dBm EIRP.
Passive RF-SN achieves 224 bps data rate with 3% BER at 23.6 dBm EIRP.
System effectively powers sensors at 13.5 cm depth in concrete.
Abstract
This research contributes to long-term structural health monitoring (SHM) by exploring radio frequency energy-powered sensor nodes (RF-SNs) embedded in concrete. Unlike traditional in-situ monitoring systems relying on batteries or wire-connected power sources, the RF-SN captures radio energy from a mobile radio transmitter for sensing and communication. This offers a cost-effective solution for consistent in-situ perception. To optimize the system performance across various situations, we've explored both active and passive communication methods. For the active RF-SN, we implement a specialized control circuit enabling the node to transmit data through ZigBee protocol at low incident power. For the passive RF-SN, radio energy is not only for power but also as a carrier signal, with data conveyed by modulating the amplitude of the backscattered radio wave. To address the challenge of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEnergy Harvesting in Wireless Networks · RFID technology advancements · Full-Duplex Wireless Communications
