1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is directed to systems and methods for monitoring mechanically coupled structures.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Sensors are known (e.g. those based on the Sagnac effect) that determine rotations absolutely and are therefore usable for recording the dynamic behavior of large mechanically coupled structures under the influence of external forces independent of local reference frames. However, due to unavoidable drift in these sensors, frequency range is limited (from below).
It is therefore a goal of the invention to provide a system and method for monitoring mechanically coupled structures that makes monitoring of chronological sequences of mechanically coupled structure behavior possible.
The preceding and other shortcomings of the prior art are addressed by the present invention that provides, in a first aspect, a system for monitoring a mechanically coupled structure.
A first sensor is configured to determine at predetermined times its orientation relative to Earth's rotation axis as a first measurement, wherein the first sensor is connectable with a first part of the mechanically coupled structure. At least one second sensor, which has a known first orientation to the first sensor at startup of the system and which is configured to determine a rotation rate or an acceleration as a second measurement, wherein the at least one second sensor is connectable with a second part of the mechanically coupled structure. A central unit is provided as well as a communication network over which the central unit is connected with the first sensor and the second sensor.
The first sensor is configured to transmit the first measurement to the central unit, the second sensor is configured to transmit the second measurement to the central unit and the central unit is configured to monitor the mechanically coupled structure by means of the first and second measurement.
In a second aspect the invention provides a method for monitoring of mechanically coupled structures.
Such method includes the step of determining at predetermined times the orientation of a first sensor relative to the Earth's rotation axis by means of the sensor as a first measurement. The first measurement is transmitted to a central unit. A rotation rate or acceleration of at least one second sensor, which has a known first orientation to the first sensor, is determined at startup as a second measurement. The second measurement is transmitted to the central unit. A monitoring value is generated from the first and the second measurement.
The foregoing and additional features of the invention will become further apparent from the detailed description that follows. Such description is accompanied by a set of drawing figures in which numerals, corresponding to those of the written description, point to the features of the invention. Like numerals refer to like features of the invention throughout both the drawing figures and the written description.
In
The first sensor 102 may be formed, for example, as a Sagnac sensor or a Coriolis sensor. Both types of sensors are able to detect their orientation relative to Earth's rotation axis via the Sagnac effect and the Coriolis effect, respectively.
The communication network 108 may be wireless or wire-bound. Optical communication via optical fiber cables or via free space propagation is possible as well as electric or electromagnetic communication. In this process, any communication paths between the sensors 102, 104 and the central unit 106 are possible. For example, a direct unidirectional communication between the single sensors 102, 104, respectively, and the central unit 106 may be provided as a communication path that is particularly easy to implement. Also more complex communication paths like bidirectional communication between the single sensors 102, 104 as well as between each of the sensors 102, 104 and the central unit 106 are possible.
If necessary, the system may be improved by providing GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System) sensors technology (not illustrated), as for example GPS (Global Positioning System), Galileo or Glonass in the sensors 102, 104, and then a measurement of the absolute position of the sensors 102, 104 is possible. Furthermore, using a fixed connection of antennas of the GNSS to the sensors 102, 104 it is possible to draw conclusions about rotations of the antennas (inclination or torsion) of the GNSS by the measurements of the sensors 102, 104, which would not be readily possible by satellite navigation alone. The antennas of the GNSS may also be used for determining translations.
In
By the fixed reference of the first sensor 102 to Earth's rotation axis 202 it is possible to filter a long time drift, which also enables long time measurements, such as the detection of landslides, settlement of buildings, etc.
The second sensor 104 may be formed as a rotation sensor, which has less precision for determining the orientation to Earth's rotation axis compared to the first sensor 102, whereby the system can be reasonably priced. The first sensor 102 may, for example, have a precision of 0.01°/hour or better, while the second sensor may have a precision of only 1°/hour.
A mechanically coupled structure 101, monitored with the system and the method of the present invention, respectively, may be a structure, for which it is important to determine whether the orientation of single parts with respect to each other is changing, for example a building, a bridge, a ship, an airplane or a machine. While it is important for the aforementioned structure to detect any movements with respect to one other reliably in order to determine damages (e.g. after an earthquake) there are also known mechanically coupled structures, whose parts are allowed to move in specific allowed directions. For example, the rotor of a wind turbine is allowed to perform a rotational movement with respect to the stator. Rotating unbalance of the rotor, which leads to an additional linear component of movement of the rotor, should, however, be detected, allowing for repair of the wind turbine if necessary. Also parts of Earth's surface (such as mountainsides, but also continuously connected parts of the earth crust) may be viewed as mechanically coupled structures.
In a hybrid sensor system 400 as illustrated in
With such a system loads or damages on buildings can be determined over deformations, which have been caused by earthquakes for example. The deformation of the structure gives a primary measurement, is present before damage, and can be used for quantitative ad hoc judgment of the potential of damage of a load. In this concept the first sensor 102 and the several second sensors 402 are firmly connected with the basic structure of a building 403. As the first sensor 102 can capture rotations absolutely based on the Sagnac effect, the orientation of the building relative of the rotation axis 202 of the earth 200 is determined automatically, before, during and after an earthquake in real time. This allows the determination of the change of orientation of a building, which may have changed due to influences of a force, such as an earthquake or the like, without the need for local references.
According to
According to
The phase velocity c (an apparent phase velocity in a heterogeneous medium as ratio of the rotation rate {dot over (Ω)} and the acceleration a) is changing significantly with the ground conditions (granite has a specific phase velocity, for example) so that an exploration can be carried out by means of these systems. Hence, it is possible to search for deposits with a portable device and to analyze the time dependence by a fixedly installed network of sensors, respectively.
According to the embodiment of the system 700 illustrated in
Provided that the slave sensors have not moved from their original location/arrangement, their inertial measurements, which get less precise in the course of time, can be recalibrated. This can be carried out on the one hand by exact initial measurement of the location/arrangement and, if necessary, the positions of the sensors relative to Earth's rotation axis at the initiation of startup and by storing at a time to the averaged single measurement values, which are then newly displayed, on the other hand by comparison of the measurements after an advanced time t1 (for example after a predetermined time interval after startup of the system, if necessary repeatingly after predetermined time intervals) with measurements of the master sensor which generates smaller measurement errors over time because of higher precision. The first method can be used for all kinds of rotation sensors, therefore also for those which, due to their limited precision, are not able to resolve earth rotation rate as measurement value reference signal themselves. The second method raises the integrity of the self-calibration method considerably, as a check of plausibility with the actual conditions in the spatial proximity of the single slave sensors is carried out via current measurements of the master sensors.
One has to take into account that, for a successful self-calibration, no event should have happened which changes the original location/arrangement of the slave sensor. This information is given in realistic cases (earthquake, abrupt change of position) mostly directly in the data of the slave sensors.
A further possibility is the self-calibration of the slave sensors, which themselves have the capability to measure Earth's rotation rate as a reference signal with sufficiently high precision. Then, the slave sensor can self-consistently initiate self-calibration against the original values of Earth's rotation rate measurement in case a tolerance threshold of the drift values is exceeded in the course of time. Also the master sensor would have to perform this procedure after a longer time period in order to maintain stable drift values over very long time periods.
At this point the comparison to current master measurements can again increase the integrity of the method considerably.
As already discussed, it is also possible that the central unit 106 is housed together with the first sensor 102 or even one of the second sensors 104 in a casing.
A time reference can be provided by using a clock as time measurement device 702, 704 at single sensors 102, 104 or also via radio communication with a guaranteed low latency time (specification of the transmission protocol), wherein the assignment of times (per clock) can be carried out at the central unit 106 for each single sensor 102, 104. The time references used are, for example, to get a chronological sequence of the processes and to bring the measurements determined at different times in relation to each other. In this way the spread of damages over time can be determined and determination of the integrity of the system can be drawn. For example, it can be assumed that, in the case of a proceeding spread of an offset of parts of a mechanically coupled structure 102, all sensors 102, 104 connected with the mechanically coupled structure 101 acquire the orientation and acceleration change, respectively, in an expected chronological sequence, that depends on the respective position of the sensors 102, 104. In case single sensors 102, 104 measure a time dependence of the orientation or acceleration, respectively, it can be assumed from differences that a measurement error has occurred.
According to
In following step S812 changes of the rotation rate and, if necessary, an acceleration are determined. By a comparison with a master sensor 102 in a step S814, changes between the first sensor 102 and the second sensor 104 are calculated whereby, for example, deformations can be recognized. Moreover, the integrity of data is examined, in order to avoid measurement errors. In case of security relevant conditions an alarm function is initiated. In step S816 a protocol file is generated afterwards and files may be transmitted to a control station and an early warning function may be activated, respectively. Afterwards, the master sensor 102 is read out again in step S804 and the monitoring of the mechanically coupled structure 101 is carried out anew.
While the invention has been described with reference to its presently-preferred embodiment, it is not limited thereto. Rather, this invention is limited only insofar as it is defined by the following set of patent claims and includes within its scope all equivalents thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2010 053 582.6 | Dec 2010 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/006086 | 12/5/2011 | WO | 00 | 7/15/2013 |