Author_Institution :
Sch. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Central South Univ., Changsha, China
Abstract :
Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) have become an increasingly compelling platform for structural health monitoring (SHM) due to relatively low-cost, easy installation, etc. However, the challenge of effectively monitoring structural health condition (e.g., damage) under WSN constraints (e.g., limited energy, narrow bandwidth) and sensor faults has not been studied before. In this paper, we focus on tolerating sensor faults in WSN-based SHM. We design a distributed WSN framework for SHM and then examine its ability to cope with sensor faults. We bring attention to an undiscovered yet interesting fact, i.e., the real measured signals introduced by faulty sensors may cause an undamaged location to be identified as damaged (false positive) or a damaged location as undamaged (false negative) diagnosis. This can be caused by faults in sensor bonding, precision degradation, amplification gain, bias, drift, noise, and so forth. We present a distributed algorithm to detect such types of faults, and offer an online signal reconstruction algorithm to recover from the wrong diagnosis. Through simulations and a WSN prototype system, we evaluate the effectiveness of our proposed algorithms.
Keywords :
condition monitoring; fault diagnosis; signal detection; signal reconstruction; structural engineering; wireless sensor networks; WSN constraints; WSN-based SHM; amplification gain; distributed WSN framework; distributed algorithm; energy-efficient structural health monitoring; fault detection; fault-tolerant structural health monitoring; online signal reconstruction algorithm; precision degradation; sensor bonding; sensor faults; wireless sensor networks; Fault tolerance; Fault tolerant systems; Monitoring; Noise; Shape; Vibrations; Wireless sensor networks; Wireless sensor networks; energy-efficiency; fault detection; fault tolerance; structural health monitoring;