DisastersStudent invents a wireless vibration sensor which harvests energy from earthquakes

Published 26 November 2012

A wireless vibration sensor being developed by an engineering student could provide a low-cost solution for engineers to monitor the damage of buildings affected by earthquakes; currently, no sensor exists in the marketplace which does not rely on batteries or electricity supply to run

A wireless vibration sensor being developed by a Victoria University student could provide a low-cost solution for engineers to monitor the damage of buildings affected by earthquakes.

Daniel Tomicek, a fourth year Electronic and Computer Systems Engineering student, has been working on the innovative device, which harnesses the kinetic energy generated by earthquakes, as part of his final year research project.

A Victoria University release reports that the wireless sensor Tomicek has developed is designed to be placed in several locations of a building to monitor the stress sustained by different areas during an earthquake.

The sensor harnesses the energy of the building’s movement during an earthquake to power itself, measuring the acceleration of the movement, and transmitting information in the form of data packets to an off-site computer. The data can then be used by engineers to help assess the extent of damage to the building.

When earthquakes occur, the energy harvested from the vibrations activates the wireless transceiver to transmit the data packets which contain the sensor’s identifier. The greater the vibrations, the greater the energy harvested and the more packets that are sent. The device uses minimal energy — so when there is no movement, the sensor simply does not operate.

Tomicek has been working with Professor Winston Seah and Dr. Ramesh Rayudu from Victoria’s Faculty of Engineering to develop a prototype which is affordable, and can be easily fixed to different parts of a building.

The release notes that currently, no sensor exists in the marketplace which does not rely on batteries or electricity supply to run, meaning Tomicek’s sensor is a major step forward.

“The biggest challenge has been figuring out how to make the sensor work from a cold start — how to ensure the initial packet of information was sent, given that earthquake movements begin so suddenly,” says Tomicek.

He has been testing the sensor’s capabilities recently at Te Papa’s Earthquake House in its Awesome Forces exhibit, where the device monitored “earthquakes” at the house over the course of a week.

“Testing at the Earthquake House was a real success. The device managed to sense each earthquake and send packets of information for each one. Being able to use the exhibit was a very handy way of testing the device, and the staff members at Te Papa were really supportive.”

Tomicek says he was inspired to create a kinetic sensor after a friend worked on a similar project during a summer research scholarship at Victoria University. He had also heard about applications being developed in Europe, where special springs added to dance floors in nightclubs can harness an electrical current generated by the movement of dancers, which is then stored in batteries and used to run devices.

Tomicek is looking forward to graduating next year and doing some overseas travel, before applying the skills he has learnt at university in the workplace.

Te Papa Awesome Forces exhibition
Awesome Forces is Te Papa’s most popular long-term exhibition and is supported by the Earthquake Commission (EQC), and GNS Science. GNS Science’s expertise, research, and materials are used to develop its content, and EQC supports the exhibition and shares its key messages throughout the interactive experience.