Publication | Closed Access
Smart sensing technology: opportunities and challenges
560
Citations
28
References
2004
Year
Smart sensors with embedded processors and wireless links promise to transform civil infrastructure monitoring, yet no scalable framework exists for distributed data processing in structural health systems, a gap highlighted by a 2002 NRC report. This paper introduces smart sensing technology and outlines its opportunities and challenges. © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
'Smart' sensors with embedded microprocessors and wireless communication links have the potential to change fundamentally the way civil infrastructure systems are monitored, controlled, and maintained. Indeed, a 2002 National Research Council report noted that the use of networked systems of embedded computers and sensors throughout society could well dwarf all previous milestones in the information revolution. However, a framework does not yet exist that can allow the distributed computing paradigm offered by smart sensors to be employed for structural health monitoring and control systems; current algorithms assume that all data is centrally collected and processed. Such an approach does not scale to systems with densely instrumented arrays of sensors that will be required for the next generation of structural health monitoring and control systems. This paper provides a brief introduction to smart sensing technology and identifies some of the opportunities and associated challenges. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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