New sensors to monitor health of U.S. infrastructure

Published 13 January 2009

Northeastern University researchers are working on developing new sensor systems for cars and trucks that will allow road and bridge infrastructure to be assessed in real-time across the United States

When experts discuss the state of U.S. infrastructures, they invariably choose from three adjectives to describe it: “aging,” “dilapidated,” and the favorite “crumbling” (see HS Daily Wire’s three-part series, “The Crisis of U.S. Infrastructure”: Pt. 1, 10 July 2008; Pt. 2, 14 July 2008; Pt. 3, 15 July 2008). Researchers at Northeastern University are working on developing new sensor systems for cars and trucks that will allow road and bridge infrastructure to be assessed in real-time across the United States. Northeastern will lead the five-year VOTERS (Versatile Onboard Traffic Embedded Roaming Sensors) project along with a range of government, industry, and academic partners. Dr. Ming Wang and Dr. Sara Wadia-Fascetti, both professors of civil engineering at Northeastern University, will co-direct the project, which has been awarded $9 million in federal funding.

The team, assembled from university, industry, and government partners, will equip vehicles, such as city buses, with multiple sensors that monitor surface conditions while the vehicle is in motion. The sensors will use acoustics and radar to monitor the roads and bridges under real driving conditions, looking for potholes and cracks in the concrete and other abnormalities that are in need of repair. The technique will eliminate the need for current inspection methods that involve hazardous and congestion-prone highway work zones.

The goal of this project is to create a cost-effective and safe way to monitor our civil infrastructure under normal driving conditions,” said Wang, principal investigator on the project. “This sensing technology will create a way to detect problems, both on the surface and subsurface, so that problems can be fixed more efficiently.”

Computers installed in the vehicles will control the sensors and a GPS system will pinpoint the collected data to very precise locations. Constant streams of data will be processed and reported back to base stations using a mobile phone system, which will then be analyzed so that timely repairs can be made in vulnerable areas. Northeastern will collaborate with various government, academic and industry partners on the project, including the Massachusetts Highway Department, Analogic Corporation, Infrasense, and researchers at Boston University, University of Massachusetts at Lowell, and University of Vermont, in addition to the primary Joint Venture partners.

VOTERS is part of the NIST’s Technology Innovation Program.