This invention is about a sensor structure that enables remote powering of underwater acoustic sensor networks (UASN).
Sensors constitute a connection between the physical medium and industrial electrical/electronic devices. These devices are used in many industrial processes such as control, security, and monitoring.
Today, it is possible to mention hundreds of sensor types manufactured. Sensors can be categorized according to many different criteria such as the magnitude measured, output power, power requirements, etc.
Active sensors require an external energy supply. They generally operate on a battery or an accumulator. However, the main problem of sensor networks is energy constraint.
In the state of the art on this technique, the invention mentioned in the U.S. Pat. No. 7,835,226 B2, it is proposed to perform communication and powering in wireless sensor networks through a pipe.
Another patent document in the state of the art is WO 2008/058076 A1. The invention presented in this document is about supplying energy to the underground sensors used in petroleum and gas extraction, and about wireless communication.
The objective of this invention is to construct a sensor architecture that enables remote powering of underwater acoustic sensor networks without using batteries or accumulators.
With this invention, it is going to be possible to use sensor networks with relatively indefinite lifetime in all types of underwater sensing applications [1] such as meteorology, fishing, and military applications, and the technical capabilities of these systems will be enhanced.
Since the power supply (battery, accumulator, etc) of each sensor in sensor networks is limited, the lifetime of sensor networks is constrained. Conventional sensor network technologies are constrained by the high priority need to take this energy and lifetime restriction into account. In conventional technologies, sensors used to be designed to have the least possible energy consumption in all processes (sensing, communication) in order to delay running out of the energy source.
With the novel system and method used in the sensor structure proposed in the present invention, the lifetime of sensor networks is prolonged infinitely by their remote powering from a high-frequency acoustic source.
The figures and related explanations used for the detailed description of the sensor for remotely powered underwater acoustic sensor networks developed with this invention are as follows.
For a better explanation of the RPUASN sensor developed in this invention, the parts and units in the figures are numbered, and the description of each number is as follows.
1.1 Hydrophone
2.1 DC Converter
2.2 Capacitor
4.1 Data Receiver
4.2 Data Transmitter
4.3 Transducer
Sensor Architecture:
While power harvesting from many different sources have been considered in the literature [2], no work has yet explicitly addressed the needs of Underwater Acoustic Sensor Networks (UASN).
In the proposed network architecture, Remotely Powered Underwater Acoustic Sensor Network (RPUASN) nodes are fed by an external acoustic source. Voltage is induced on the receiver of a passive node, and it is converted to DC. The DC power can either be used to operate the sensor node or kept in a storage capacitor for later use.
A typical RPUASN node hardware is depicted in
The electrical behavior of a piezoelectric material is modeled as an induced AC voltage Vind(t) (
Sensor Power Budget:
The source level, SL, in dB re 1 μPa at 1 m, of an underwater acoustic transmitter is given by
SL=170.8+10 log10Pelec+10 log10η+DI (1)
where DI is the directivity index of the source in dB, and Pelec is the electrical input power at the source [5]. The electro-acoustic power conversion efficiency η varies between 0.2 and 0.7 for typical sonar transmitters [3], [5]. Assuming deep water characteristics and neglecting reflection from the air and bottom surfaces throughout the analysis, combining absorption and spherical spreading loss, the total attenuation level (AL) in dB is [3]:
AL=20 log10R+α(f)R (2)
where R is the propagation range in m. The absorption coefficient α(f) in dB/m increases with frequency and depends on the characteristics of the propagation medium [6]. The difference
RL=SL−AL (3)
gives the received level (RL) in dB at a sensor whose distance to the source is R. Then, the acoustic pressure p on the hydrophone is
p=10RL/20 (4)
which generates voltage at its open circuit terminals. Receiving voltage sensitivity (RVS) of a hydrophone, that accounts for the efficiency of converting incident sound energy to electrical energy, is defined as
RVS=20 log10M (5)
in terms of sensitivity M in V/μPa [5]. Using (4) and (5), the RMS induced voltage is expressed as
Vind=pM=(10RL/20)(10RVS/20) (6)
According to the well-known maximum power transfer theorem, load power in
where Pavailable is in Watts.
Power losses in recently designed piezoelectric harvesting circuits have become very small compared to the input power, leading to improved efficiencies between 60% and 85% [4]. By substituting Eq. (6) into Eq. (7) and assuming a realizable harvesting efficiency of 70%, the total power harvested at an RPUASN node with n hydrophones can be obtained as
Numerical Examples for Feasibility of RPUASN:
From the relationships established in the previous section, it can be quantitatively shown that using only commercially available components and devices, underwater sensors can be operated over indefinite lifetimes via remote acoustic powering. In the examples below, the electro-acoustic conversion efficiency of the projector at the source is taken as 50%. Unless otherwise stated, Rload=Rp=125Ω and an RPUASN node includes n=5 hydrophones with sensitivity RVS=−150 dB re V/μPa at the operating frequency of the external acoustic source [5], [7].
A. Input Electrical Power and Source-to-Node Distance
In this example, source frequency f=10 kHz. The source is directional with a DI of 20 dB, which is achievable through a circular piston or disc type projector [3]. As shown in
B. Harvested Power and Source Frequency
The change in the harvested power with frequency is investigated for various R values. In
C. The Effect of Source Directivity on Harvested Power
To investigate the effect of directivity, Pharv is plotted against R for various DI values, as shown in
Network Coverage and Connectivity:
In RPUASN, event data must be reliably sensed and communicated to a remote sink via sensor nodes. Therefore, in order to guarantee sensing coverage and communication connectivity, it is important to carefully design the RPUASN deployment according to source and node characteristics.
Coverage describes the monitoring quality of a sensor network, and k-coverage implies that every location in the network is monitored by at least k nodes. In order to cover a three dimensional region efficiently while maintaining network connectivity for any given random node deployment, it is vital to estimate the appropriate sensing range, transmission range, and node density. We assume that N nodes are deployed randomly and uniformly in a three dimensional region of volume V. Then, each node must have a minimum sensing range (rs) given by
where δ is defined as the coverage fraction, which determines the probability that a point in the network is within the sensing range of at least one sensor [9]. It is shown in [10] that “radius . . . (rs) required to achieve a sensing-covered network is greater than the transmission range . . . (rt) required to have a connected network.” In agreement with [11] we assume that typically, rt≧rs, and 1-coverage implies connectivity for a given number of nodes in RPUASN. Therefore, the rest of our study is based on the minimum rs to achieve 1-coverage for given N and V.
To provide coverage and connectivity in the network, harvested power given by (8) should satisfy the minimum power requirement (Preq) of an RPUASN node. Using an external acoustic source transmitting with directivity DI and input electrical power Pelec at frequency f, the maximum range at which an RPUASN node can harvest Preq is denoted as Rmax. For this configuration, the equation for Preq can be obtained by inserting the open form for (3) into (8) as follows:
Rearranging (10) gives the following condition for the maximum range Rmax:
We consider two possible deployment scenarios. In the first scenario, RPUASN nodes are dispersed around an omnidirectional acoustic source, as shown in
which gives the relation between the radius of the deployment region and sensing range for 1-coverage.
The second deployment scenario is presented in
The directed source can supply RPUASN nodes with Preq at ranges no greater than Rmax, and hence, it allows for a deployment volume in the shape of a spherical cone with vertex angle θ and width w, which is the diameter of the spherical cap of the cone. The expression for the minimum sensing range rs of a node is
for guaranteed sensing coverage, and hence communication connectivity.
Consequently, (11) and either (12) or (14) can be used for these two deployment scenarios to determine appropriate design parameters for RPUASN with guaranteed coverage and connectivity, as will be shown in the numerical examples. As in the previous section, η=50%, Rload=Rp=125Ω, n=5, and RVS=−150 dB re V/μPa at the source frequency [5], [7]. The required number of nodes is analyzed for a coverage fraction of δ=0.999 [9]. The power characteristics of sensors are based on commercially available nodes and modems. In particular, we consider Preq=0.2 W [12], [13], Preq=0.5 W [8], and Preq=1 W [14] to account for typical power requirements of RPUASN nodes. The external acoustic source is omnidirectional for spherical deployment (
A. Volume Powered by the External Acoustic Source
When the source is omnidirectional, the radius of the sphere in which RPUASN nodes can be deployed is given by (11). For Preq=0.5 W, the source can power nodes at a distance up to Rmax=100 m for varying Pelec at different frequencies, as illustrated in
Rmax stands for the height of the spherical cone when the source is a circular piston with DI=20 dB. The variation of Rmax with Pelec and f for this case, again with Preq=0.5 W, is shown in
B. Number of Nodes and Source Power
The number of sensors, N, needed for 1-coverage in spherical and conical deployment scenarios are plotted against source power in
C. Number of Nodes and Sensing Range
An event field can be covered by a smaller number of RPUASN nodes if the sensing range of nodes is increased. In
The results for the spherical cone scenario are plotted in
These examples show that it is practically possible to achieve 1-coverage and connectivity in a given volume powered by a given acoustic source with a feasible number of commercially available ([7]-[9], [12]-[14]) sensor nodes.
While the foregoing written description of the invention enables one of ordinary skill to make and use what is considered presently to be the best mode thereof, those of ordinary skill will understand and appreciate the existence of variations, combinations, and equivalents of the specific embodiment, method, and examples herein. The invention should therefore not be limited by the above described embodiment, method, and examples, but by all embodiments and methods within the scope and spirit of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20110007606 | Curtis | Jan 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150036463 A1 | Feb 2015 | US |