EP2804166A1 - Câble de capteur et système - Google Patents

Câble de capteur et système Download PDF

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Publication number
EP2804166A1
EP2804166A1 EP13167467.3A EP13167467A EP2804166A1 EP 2804166 A1 EP2804166 A1 EP 2804166A1 EP 13167467 A EP13167467 A EP 13167467A EP 2804166 A1 EP2804166 A1 EP 2804166A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
signal line
core
sensor cable
axis
signal
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP13167467.3A
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German (de)
English (en)
Inventor
Rob Meulenberg
Hubertus Borghans
Matthijs Theodorus Wilhelmus Van de Ven
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
PSS Consultancy & Equipment BV
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PSS Consultancy & Equipment BV
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by PSS Consultancy & Equipment BV filed Critical PSS Consultancy & Equipment BV
Priority to EP13167467.3A priority Critical patent/EP2804166A1/fr
Priority to PCT/EP2014/059663 priority patent/WO2014184144A1/fr
Priority to ES14723437T priority patent/ES2757906T3/es
Priority to EP14723437.1A priority patent/EP2997560B1/fr
Publication of EP2804166A1 publication Critical patent/EP2804166A1/fr
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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    • GPHYSICS
    • G08SIGNALLING
    • G08GTRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEMS
    • G08G1/00Traffic control systems for road vehicles
    • G08G1/01Detecting movement of traffic to be counted or controlled
    • G08G1/02Detecting movement of traffic to be counted or controlled using treadles built into the road

Definitions

  • the present disclosure relates to a sensor cable comprising a deformable signal line for transmitting a signal, and one or more rigid portions and one or more resilient portions for reversibly deforming the signal line in the cable under the influence of a varying external load on the cable and therewith affecting a signal transmission property of the signal line for transmitting the signal.
  • the present disclosure also relates to a system comprising such sensor cable and to a method.
  • a sensor cable of the above-described type is known from WO 2004/006200 .
  • a portion of the cable comprises an axis and a core extending along the axis, a portion of the signal line is helically wound around the core and the rigid and resilient portions are arranged for, under the influence of the varying external load on the sensor cable, reversibly deforming the signal line with respect to the axis.
  • Such sensor cable provides a large signal line length with respect to the sensor cable length which increases sensitivity.
  • the signal line length per sensor cable length can be determined by selecting a core size and a winding pitch of the signal line around the core.
  • the size and/or shape of the core, e.g. the core diameter, and/or the winding pitch may vary along the cable.
  • the varying external load can cause deformation of plural windings of the signal line, increasing signal strength in a system based on the sensor cable.
  • a large density of rigid portions per unit length of the sensor cable may be provided with a lower density of rigid portions per unit length of signal line unit length.
  • This facilitates providing plural well separated zones of deformation along the signal line due to a single rigid portion deforming plural signal line windings and/or a number of (possibly closely spaced) rigid portions deforming plural signal line windings and/or plural portions of a signal line winding, further increasing sensitivity.
  • each deformation in such deformation zone may be kept relatively small and cause relatively low signal level, whereas the combined effect of plural deformations can provide a significantly stronger signal, e.g. comparable to a single large deformation. This facilitates maintaining the signal line deformation well within the range of plastic deformation of the signal line material, increasing robustness of the sensor cable and/or allowing use of relatively delicate signal line material.
  • a portion is considered rigid if it is sufficiently strong and shape-maintaining to act on and deform the signal line against the force of the resilient portion(s) and the proper rigidity and resiliency of the signal line, which, in turn, provide resistance to such deformation and urge the signal line back towards a specific shape and/or geometry with respect to the axis without the external load.
  • the signal line may be an elongated object and the deformation may comprise a lateral bending of the signal line with respect to the direction of elongation.
  • the signal line comprises an elongated light guide, in particular an optical fibre, more in particular a plastic optical fibre.
  • an optical fibre more in particular a plastic optical fibre.
  • optical signals are generally insensitive to electrical and/or magnetic stray fields, but they can be controlled by mechanical means, including deformation of a light guide through which the signals travel to affect the transmitted intensity.
  • Optical fibres are well known and fibres that can guide light with little loss over hundreds meters fibre length are commercially available. Changing a bending radius of an optical fibre can change dispersion and/or loss of light by leaking out of the fibre, which may be detectable. Such dispersion and/or loss may be wavelength dependent.
  • Plastic optical fibres tend to provide somewhat higher damping to glass fibres but they also tend to be significantly cheaper and more robust to bending than glass fibres, in particular repeated bending.
  • One or more of the resilient portions may be formed by portions the signal line itself.
  • the signal line comprises a plastic object, e.g. a plastic optical fibre, which may exhibit significant inherent resiliency to return to its previous shape when transiently plastically deformed. This facilitates construction of the sensor cable.
  • a portion of the signal line may be supported over a void in the core so as to be reversibly pressed into the void by one or more of the rigid portions when the sensor cable is subject to a suitable load.
  • a suitable rigid portion may be provided by a local hard and/or thick plastic and/or metallic portion, adjacent to a relatively softer and/or thinner portion, e.g. the rigid portions may be provided by a castellated and/or corrugated layer adjacent to the signal line, wherein relatively rigid castellations and/or corrugations are separated by voids and/or spaces (partly) filled with one or more softer material which preferably is resilient to urge the signal line back to a specific configuration.
  • resilient portions may also be provided by the signal line as stated above.
  • the rigid and resilient portions may be arranged for effecting the reversible deformation in a radial direction with respect to the axis.
  • This facilitates use of the sensor cable by arranging the sensor cable generally perpendicular to the (expected) direction of forces from the load.
  • a flexible core e.g. a longitudinally flexible object, but which preferably is relatively rigid in radial direction, such as a flexible tube, rod, cable, wire and/or monofilament of metal, plastic and/or glass.
  • Such sensor cable can also facilitate manufacture, e.g. by providing an amount of material with rigid portions and one or more layers of resilient material, and winding the signal line around the thus provided core.
  • At least some of the rigid portions and/or at least some of the resilient portions may be arranged radially inward from the signal line, relative to the axis. This facilitates detection of forces acting on the sensor cable with a substantial radial or tangential component with respect to the axis, e.g. with the sensor cable extending generally perpendicular to the direction of the force to be detected.
  • the one or more rigid portions are radially outside the helical portion of the signal line and the one or more resilient portions are radially inside the helical portion of the signal line e.g. being part of a resilient core material.
  • Rigid portions may also or alternatively be provided on or by the core material, or be provided on or by a sheath over the core and the signal line and/or be provided by another layer radially inside or outside of the signal line with respect to the axis.
  • An elongated rib or wire of rigid material extending along the axis, preferably radially outwards of the fibre portion, may provide an series of rigid deformation portions on adjacent windings of the signal line where the latter cross the rib or wire.
  • Rigid portions may be distributed evenly and/or irregularly around the core.
  • the signal line in at least part of the cable the signal line is wound around the core in a helical pattern with a chirality and a pitch with respect to the axis and the rigid portions are provided in a helical pattern around the core with a different chirality and/or pitch with respect to the axis.
  • Different pitches provide that rigid portions are provided in different rotational positions along the sensor cable axis such that loads from different directions with respect to the cable axis may be detected with increased reliability.
  • helical patterns with opposite chirality increases, compared to patterns of the same width and pitch but being co-rotating, the density of crossings of the patterns in axial direction and it can reduce the length over which the crossing patterns overlap each other at the crossings. Both effects increase sensitivity, the former by providing more crossing points per unit length of the sensor cable and the latter by providing more clearly located and spatially resolved deformation zones compared to patterns of the same width and pitch but being co-rotating.
  • the signal line portion is a first signal line portion and the cable also comprises a second signal line portion extending through and/or adjacent the core, thus extending adjacent the first signal line portion.
  • the second signal line portion may be helically wound around the core as well.
  • the first and second signal line portions may be separate lines arranged to transmit signals independently from each other, and need not be of a same type, e.g. the first signal line comprising an optical cable and the second signal line comprising an electrical cable.
  • the first and second signal line portions may be shielded from contact with each other and/or affecting each other, e.g. the second signal line portion extending through the core and the core providing mechanical shielding and/or shielding with regard to signal transmission properties such as electromagnetic shielding.
  • the first and second signal line portions may be of similar or identical type. This facilitates use of the sensor cable.
  • the sensor cable may provide an increased sensitivity, reliability and/or dynamic response, and/or more and/or different types of information.
  • the first signal line portion comprising a broad band optical fibre and the second signal line portion comprising a single mode polarization maintaining optical fibre, or the first signal line portion being used with a continuous signal and the second line portion being used with a time-varying, e.g. pulsed, signal.
  • both signal line portions may be used for sensing the load.
  • both first and second signal lines are deformed under the same load each signal line may be used to check the other and/or when used in combination a stronger sensor signal may be provided, increasing sensitivity of the sensor cable.
  • first and second signal line portions may be arranged extending generally adjacent each other and being in contact with each other in one or more locations and/or being (locally) separated from each other by a deformable layer.
  • the second signal line may be used to provide at least some of the one or more rigid portions for deforming the helically wound first signal line portion.
  • the first signal line portion may provide one or more rigid portions for deforming the second signal line portion in return.
  • the second signal line portion may be helically wound around the core and over and/or underneath the first signal line portion.
  • two movably mounted identically crossing optical fibres may, when one is pressed against the other at or near the crossing, provide sufficient mutual deformation to be detectable in either fibre.
  • the first and second signal line portions may be portions of a single signal transmission arrangement, in particular being portions of one signal line such as being portions of one reversed signal line, e.g. a looped optical fibre. This enables arranging both signal input and signal exit ends of the signal line at or near one physical side of the sensor cable, and when both first and second signal lines are deformable under the same load the signal may be combined for checking and or increasing a signal level as outlined before.
  • the first signal line portion is helically wound around the core with a first chirality and pitch with respect to the axis and the second signal line portion is helically wound around the core and the first signal line portion in an opposite chirality and with a different pitch with respect to the axis than the first portion of the signal line. This facilitates manufacture of the sensor cable.
  • the second signal line portion extends substantially axially along the cable axis and the first signal line portion is helically wound around the second signal line portion, the second signal line portion forming the core around which the first signal line portion is helically wound.
  • the first and second signal lines may form rigid portions for mutually deforming the signal lines under the load.
  • a portion of the core comprises a core axis and a helical groove around the core axis for receiving at least part of the signal line.
  • the signal line may be partly embedded in the core, defining the position of the signal line relative to the core, protecting the signal line against deformation beyond the domain of plastic deformation and/or facilitating manipulation of the sensor cable.
  • said portion of the core also comprises a second helical groove around the core axis for receiving a second signal line portion.
  • the second signal line portion may be partly embedded in the core and, besides the aforementioned benefits for each signal line portion, the relative positions of plural signal line portions may be well defined.
  • the core comprises an inner portion and a cover layer, wherein the inner portion comprises a threaded portion with a first chirality and pitch and the cover layer provides the helical groove, wherein the groove has another chirality and/or pitch than the inner portion, such that the helical thread of the inner portion provides corrugations for deforming a signal line received in the groove.
  • the grooves may be arranged to cross each other and at the positions of the crossings be provided with recesses and/or relatively soft portions, enabling radial movement of signal line portions received in the grooves at the location of the crossings.
  • the cable comprises a deformable sheath around the signal line and the core, protecting the signal line and core while enabling the desired deformation under the load.
  • a system which comprises a sensor cable as provided herewith and further comprising a source arranged for transmitting a signal through the signal line of the sensor cable and a receiver arranged for detecting at least part of the signal emitted by the source and transmitted through the signal line.
  • the system provides a sensor for sensing presence of the load complete with signal source and signal detector.
  • Further devices and/or sub-systems may be included also, e.g. one or more power supplies, controllers etc.
  • the system may comprise plural sensor cables which enables sensing loads in plural locations.
  • such system comprises plural detectors associated with different sensor cables and/or different signal lines.
  • the system comprises plural signal sources, e.g. associated with different sensor cables and/or different signal lines. This facilitates installation and operation as the system effectively comprises plural more or less independent sensors.
  • the system comprises plural sensor cables arranged closely adjacent each other, in particular parallel to each other. This enables sensing loads in plural locations, and in particular sensing a direction of propagation and/or a velocity of one or more loads, in case the system is provided with a counter and/or a clock.
  • the source comprises a light source
  • the signal line comprises a light guide
  • the receiver comprises an optical receiver.
  • Suitable light sources are arranged for emitting continuous, pulsed and/or modulated light with a wavelength in a range of about 0.1 to 10 micrometers, in particular visible and/or near-infrared wavelengths in a range of about 0.4-2 micrometers, e.g.
  • LEDs Light Emitting Diodes
  • LEDs can provide incoherent or coherent (laser) light with relatively narrow-band spectral width and they tend to be highly versatile and controllable.
  • other light sources although polychromatic and/or broad-band light sources are also conceivable.
  • Optical fibres and detectors operating at such wavelengths are also readily commercially available.
  • one or more detectors may be arranged to detect a signal characteristic that may be affected by deformation of the signal line subject by the load both before and after transmission through the sensor cable, so that signal offsets and/or -drifts may be accounted for.
  • the system may further comprise a controller and at least one signalling device, memory and/or communication device.
  • Suitable signalling devices may comprise counters, warning systems, traffic lights, toll charging devices, cameras, etc.
  • Suitable memories may comprise read only, write only and/or programmable memories, permanent and/or exchangeable.
  • Suitable communication devices may comprise connection ports, transmitters and/or receivers for wireless communication, for authorities-alert systems, remote control systems, etc.
  • At least part of the sensor cable is arranged in or under a deformable object for supporting a person, in particular a floor mat, a seat, a bed (e.g. in or under a mattress), etc.
  • a deformable object for supporting a person, in particular a floor mat, a seat, a bed (e.g. in or under a mattress), etc.
  • Such objects may detect at least presence of a person, e.g. for security systems and/or in hospitals to monitor perimeters or restricted areas and/or person behaviour, e.g. patient movement.
  • An embodiment comprises a road having a road surface layer and at least part of the one or more sensor cables is arranged in or under the road surface layer for detecting traffic on the road surface layer.
  • WO 2004/006200 describes detection of pedestrians based on detection of deformation of an optical signal line provided with special gripping means.
  • the presently provided sensor cable and system have such increased sensitivity that special gripping means need not be applied and tiles may be placed directly on the sensor cable. This facilitates use.
  • the presently provided sensor cable and system enable use for detecting vehicles on roads for vehicle use, e.g. asphalt or brick roads, when at least part of the sensor cable is embedded in or under the road surface layer. This facilitates robust and/or inconspicuous traffic control.
  • the road has one or more traffic zones, e.g. providing one or more traffic lanes, having a traffic flow direction, and one or more adjacent sensor cables are arranged in or under the road surface layer in one or more of the traffic zones extending substantially transverse to the respective traffic flow direction.
  • Monitoring signals from the plural adjacent sensors facilitates detection of presence and of direction and/or velocity of traffic on the road.
  • the mechanical nature of the present detection mechanism that relies on deformation of the signal line enables operation and use of the system in geometries that would suffer from shielding of electromagnetic signals.
  • the presently available system can be used with a road having a surface layer, wherein the road has one or more traffic zones and the road surface layer comprises an embedded reinforcement structure, in particular a synthetic or metal reinforcement structure such as metal bars and/or mesh, and wherein the reinforcement structure extends over at least one or more sensor cables arranged in or under the road surface layer in a traffic zone for detecting traffic on the road surface layer.
  • the reinforcement fortifies the road surface layer, in particular an asphalt layer, reducing long-time deformation and/or wear of the layer.
  • piezoelectric mechanical sensors exist. However these are expensive and delicate and also larger and less sensitive than the presently provided system.
  • Asphalt road surface layers tend to comprise plural strata, e.g. a bed of sand, one or more rubble or pebble layers and one or more asphalt layers with different compositions with respect to types, sizes and/or concentrations of filler materials.
  • the present sensor cable may be arranged in any one of these strata, provided a stiff, substantially incompressible mechanical connection with the topmost layer in contact with the traffic is provided.
  • each sensor cable is embedded in the lowest asphalt-containing layer, so that good mechanical coupling with the topmost layer exists but that maintenance and/or repair of the higher layers can be performed without damaging the embedded sensor cable.
  • a method comprising arranging at least one of the sensor cables in or under a road surface layer, the method comprising providing a channel in or under the road surface layer for accommodating a sensor cable, wherein the channel is provided from a lateral side of the road.
  • the present detector cable, system and method provide a great advantage over existing traffic control systems which rely on electromagnetic induction between passing vehicles and a measuring loop embedded in the road surface layer.
  • Such systems require large detection surface areas and cannot work with metal reinforcement structures between the measuring loop and the vehicles.
  • the road surfaces around and over the measuring loops are relatively delicate whereas they generally need to be located in the heaviest-used portions of roads, e.g. near traffic lights and/or in road portions that are used by high numbers of passing vehicles and/or that suffer frequent traffic jams.
  • a sensor cable as provided herein may extend for several meters and have a width (e.g. a diameter) of only a few centimetres.
  • a series of two, three or more adjacent parallel sensor cables may require less road surface area in traffic flow direction than a single induction measurement loop.
  • the detection also works with electrically poorly-conductive or insulating loads, which would hardly or not be detectable via induction, e.g. motorcycles and/or largely non-metallic cars.
  • a single bore hole drilled in or underneath a road surface layer would suffice to provide a channel suitably accommodating the cable; remaining spaces may be filled with a suitable filler to fix the cable to the road surface layer and establish mechanical connection to the road surface layer.
  • Such drilling and arranging the sensor cable in the channel may be done while the road is in use and/or while the reinforcement structure remains intact.
  • Fig. 1 shows a sensor cable 1 having a generally cylindrical shape with respect to an axis A.
  • the cable comprises a core 3, an deformable signal line for transmitting a signal in the form of a plastic optical fibre 5 and a sheath 7 around the core 3 and the fibre 5.
  • the fibre 5 is helically wound around the core 3 being received in a helical groove 9 around the core 3;
  • Fig. 1A indicates the shape of the fibre 5.
  • the core 3, fibre 5 and sheath 7 are bendable so that the cable 1 as a whole is flexible.
  • Figs. 2-3 show a very schematic view of a slice of the sensor cable 1 without the sheath 7 comprising part of a winding 11 of the fibre 5 around the core 3 in an initial configuration.
  • the core 3 (and/or the fibre 5) are further provided with a resilient layer 13, e.g. a (natural or artificial) rubber or plastic sheath, so that at least part of the fibre 5 is movable with respect to the core 3 and the axis A.
  • rigid portions 15 are provided (not shown in Fig. 1 ), e.g. in the form of corrugated bottom and/or wall portions and/or hard inclusions in the material of the core 3.
  • Fig. 3 Visible in Fig. 3 is that under the influence of a varying external load on the sensor cable 1 (indicated with arrow L in Fig. 3 ) the fibre 5 is pressed against the core 3 and the rigid portion 15 so that the fibre 5 gets locally deformed.
  • light travelling through the fibre 5 may not experience the conditions for total internal reflection within the optical fibre 5 and part of the light may leak out of (the core of) the fibre 5 so that an optical signal sent through the deformed fibre 5 gets detectably attenuated.
  • the deformation may also induce compression and/or or bending strain which may rotate a plane of polarisation of the light and/or induce chromatic dispersion for polychromic optical signals.
  • the load L is (partly) reduced, the fibre 5 is urged towards its initial shape ( Figs. 1-2 ) by the resiliency of the respective materials.
  • Fig. 4 shows another sensor cable 10, similar to the cable of Fig. 1 , but, in addition to a first signal line portion 5 as in Fig. 1 , being provided with a second signal line portion 17 which runs generally parallel to the axis A on a radially outward side of the first signal line portion 5, also being covered in the sheath 7.
  • the second signal line portion 17 here again is in the form of a plastic optical fibre.
  • the relative positions of the first and second fibres 5, 17 are shown in Fig. 4A .
  • the optical fibres 5, 17 cross at each winding of the first fibre 5, also indicated in Figs. 5-6 which show a cross sectional slice of the embodiment of Fig. 4 like Fig. 2-3 , as indicated with V in Fig. 4 , and indicated in Figs.
  • the second fibre 17 may be supported by the first fibres 5 at a small distance from the core 3 as shown in Fig. 7 , which distance may be empty or filled with a resiliently compressible material.
  • Each optical fibre 5, 17 is more rigid than the material of (a layer 13 around) the core 3 and the sheath 7 in transverse direction with respect to the direction of propagation of the fibre 5, 17, so that the fibre can flex and bend but is also largely incompressible.
  • the fibres 5 and 17 Under the influence of a varying external load on the sensor cable 1 (see arrow L in Fig. 3 ) the fibres 5 and 17 get pressed against each other and against the core 3. Then, the second fibre 17, forming a relatively rigid portion against the first fibre 5 locally deforms the fibre 5, as indicated in Fig. 6 . At the same time, the windings of the first fibre 5 form relatively rigid portions against which the second fibre 17 can be deformed ( Fig. 8 ). The deformations detectably affect the signal transmission properties of the fibres 5, 17. When the load L is (partly) reduced, the fibres 5, 17 are restored towards their initial shapes ( Figs. 4, 5, 7 ) by the resiliency of the respective materials.
  • the amount of deformation for each (affected portion of a) fibre 5, 17 is determined by the relative rigidities, flexibilities and/or dimensions of the parts (fibres 5, 17, core 3, sheath 7, grooves 9, layers 13 etc). It may be preferred that the first and second fibres 1, 17 are generally identical, possibly forming part of a single looped fibre (e.g. forward and return signal line portions).
  • another rigid object with similar position and function to the second fibre 17 may be provided, e.g. a rib or rod, an/or an electric cable, etc.
  • One such rigid object may provide increased sensitivity in one direction, corresponding with the orientation of the rigid object.
  • Plural such rigid objects distributed around the axis A facilitate detection of loads in different directions. It is noted that directionally dependent sensitivity may be beneficial for some situations, e.g. when the sensor cable is to be included in a plane structure for detecting forces within the plane or normal to the plane.
  • Fig. 9 shows another sensor cable 100, similar to the cable of Fig. 4 , but here, the second fibre 17 is helically wound around the core 3 as well and overlaps the first fibre 5.
  • the core 13 comprises grooves for both fibres 5, 17.
  • the pitches of the helices are equal but the chiralities (handednesses) of the fibres 5, 17 with respect to the axis A are opposite (see also Fig. 9A ), so that the fibres 5, 17 cross each other after each half turn.
  • the core may comprise relatively soft and/or resilient portions or recesses for accommodating deflection of one or both fibres 5, 17.
  • the inner fibre 5, preferably both the inner fibre 5 and outer fibre 17, may comprise a relatively soft and resilient outer sheath around a more rigid inner portion, obviating depth variations in the grooves. This facilitates manufacture and use.
  • Fig. 14 shows another sensor cable 100, similar to the cable of Fig. 4 , but here, the pitches of the helices of both fibres differ in addition to the opposite chiralities (handednesses) of the fibres 5, 17 with respect to the axis A.
  • the crossing points of both fibres 5, 17 are distributed around the axis A instead of lying on one or more straight lines as in Fig. 9 which may result in directionally dependent sensitivity.
  • the circumferential distribution of Fig. 14 facilitates detection of loads in different directions.
  • the amount of deformation for each (affected portion of a) fibre 5, 17 is determined by the relative rigidities, flexibilities and/or dimensions of the parts (fibres 5, 17, core 3, sheath 7, grooves 9, layers 13 etc).
  • the first and second fibres 1, 17 are generally identical, possibly forming part of a single looped fibre (e.g. forward and return signal line portions).
  • a signal transmitted through the fibre may be affected twice by the same load and signal detection may be increased.
  • Figs. 15 and 16 show an embodiment of a signal line 110 wherein a signal line portion 5 is helically wound around another signal line portion 17 extending substantially axially along the axis A forming the core around which the first signal line portion is helically wound.
  • Both signal line portions 5, 17 comprise a relatively resilient outer layer around a relatively rigid inner layer, e.g. an optical fibre with a resilient sheath. Under the influence of a load L both signal lines 5, 17 deform and provide rigid and resilient portions with respect to each other for reversibly deforming each other and affecting their respective transmission properties.
  • Fig. 17 schematically shows a system 19 comprising a road 21 having a road surface layer with a traffic zone 23 providing a traffic flow direction as indicated with arrow 25.
  • the system further comprises plural sensor cables 100 as discussed above, wherein the first and second signal line portions 5, 17 are interconnected on one end of the sensor cable 100 providing a forward line portion and a return line portion through the length of the sensor cable 100.
  • Such interconnection may be made within the cable, e.g. by folding the signal line and tracing part of it back, or by connecting respective ends of the signal line portions with a connector, e.g. a shortcut.
  • Each sensor cable 100 is connected with a source 27 arranged for transmitting a signal through a signal line 5, 17 of the respective sensor cable 100 and a receiver 29 arranged for detecting at least part of the signal emitted by the source 27 and transmitted through the respective signal line 100.
  • the sources and detectors are arranged on a single side of the road.
  • the signal sources 27 and detectors 29 are connected with a controller 31, in turn connected with traffic lights 33, a camera 35, and a wireless communication device 37 comprising a transmitter and a receiver.
  • the controller can also comprise further communication ports and/or user interfaces 39.
  • the road surface layer 21 comprises an embedded reinforcement structure 41, e.g. in the form of a steel grid.
  • the sensor cables 100 are arranged in individual channels extending from a lateral side 43 of the road surface layer.
  • the sensor cables 100 are arranged closely adjacent and generally parallel to each other in the road surface layer 21, wherein the sensor cables 100 extend underneath the reinforcement structure 41 in the traffic zone 23 substantially transverse to the traffic flow direction 25.
  • a suitable manner of arranging the sensors is by drilling a channel into the surface layer 21, inserting the sensors and refilling the channel.
  • Travelling vehicles and/or other traffic on the road surface layer 21 will slightly compress and deform the road surface layer 21, which results in a transient load L on each of the sensor cables 100 in turn, thereby affecting transmission of the signals through each sensor cable 100 as explained before.
  • Such transmission differences due to the varying loads provide a system output signal indicative of the road use.
  • Detection of subsequent signals from the adjacent sensor cables 100 and comparing with clock data provides indications of the actual velocity and travelling direction of a traffic participant, which can be used for controlling switching sequences of the traffic lights 33, photographing traffic offenders with the camera 35 and/or signalling remote systems such as traffic information services and/or warning systems against wrong-way use of a traffic zone 23.
  • a sensor cable may comprise more than two signal line portions, which may provide different helically wound portions, e.g. in identical and/or in different portions of the sensor cable.
  • Size relations may differ, e.g. a smaller core diameter with respect to signal line portion(s). Suitable sizes comprise signal line diameters of about 1-5 mm and core sizes of 1-100 mm.
  • a typical sensor cable for road detection may comprise a plastic optical multimode fibre of 1 mm diameter with a 0.5 mm sheath (i.e. total fibre diameter is 2 mm), wound around a core of glass fibre or foam of about 50 mm diameter and provided with a plastic or copper sheath, embedded in a road surface layer at a depth of about 150-450 mm.
  • Different electromagnetic signals may be transmitted through the signal line portions, e.g. different wavelengths and/or electrical signals through electrically conductive cables, wherein a varying load affects an impedance for time varying signals e.g. reducing pulse rise times and/or delays which may provide detectable dispersion and/or signal skew, in particular in differential signalling arrangements.
  • a (sensor cable of a) system may be partly worked into a fabric, e.g. braided, knitted and/or woven, for detection of movements of a person or an object on the fabric.
  • Comparing a fraction of actually input signals with output of that signal that passed through a signal line may reduce effects of offsets and/or drifts and facilitate detection of slowly changing loads, e.g. the weight of a layer of water and/or snow on a roof.
  • a signal line may comprise a gaseous or fluid medium, e.g. a liquid or a gel wherein a transient load on the Signal line provides a detectable pressure wave and/or damping thereof through the signal line.
  • a gaseous or fluid medium e.g. a liquid or a gel wherein a transient load on the Signal line provides a detectable pressure wave and/or damping thereof through the signal line.
  • Various embodiments of the invention in particular with respect to signal detection and/or processing, operating instructions for the controller etc. may be implemented as a program product for use with a computer system, where the program(s) of the program product define functions of the embodiments (including the methods described herein).
  • the program(s) can be contained on a variety of non-transitory computer-readable storage media, where, as used herein, the expression "non-transitory computer readable storage media" comprises all computer-readable media, with the sole exception being a transitory, propagating signal.
  • the program(s) can be contained on a variety of transitory computer-readable storage media.
  • Illustrative computer-readable storage media include, but are not limited to: (i) non-writable storage media (e.g., read-only memory devices within a computer such as CD-ROM disks readable by a CD-ROM drive, ROM chips or any type of solid-state non-volatile semiconductor memory) on which information is permanently stored; and (ii) writable storage media (e.g., flash memory, floppy disks within a diskette drive or hard-disk drive or any type of solid-state random-access semiconductor memory) on which alterable information is stored.
  • non-writable storage media e.g., read-only memory devices within a computer such as CD-ROM disks readable by a CD-ROM drive, ROM chips or any type of solid-state non-volatile semiconductor memory
  • writable storage media e.g., flash memory, floppy disks within a diskette drive or hard-disk drive or any type of solid-state random-access semiconductor memory

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Optical Transform (AREA)
EP13167467.3A 2013-05-13 2013-05-13 Câble de capteur et système Withdrawn EP2804166A1 (fr)

Priority Applications (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP13167467.3A EP2804166A1 (fr) 2013-05-13 2013-05-13 Câble de capteur et système
PCT/EP2014/059663 WO2014184144A1 (fr) 2013-05-13 2014-05-12 Câble capteur et système
ES14723437T ES2757906T3 (es) 2013-05-13 2014-05-12 Sistema y cable de sensor
EP14723437.1A EP2997560B1 (fr) 2013-05-13 2014-05-12 Câble de capteur et système

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EP13167467.3A EP2804166A1 (fr) 2013-05-13 2013-05-13 Câble de capteur et système

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ES (1) ES2757906T3 (fr)
WO (1) WO2014184144A1 (fr)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR3047309B1 (fr) * 2016-02-02 2019-07-26 Saipem S.A. Procede et dispositif de surveillance du comportement mecanique d'une conduite sous-marine de transport de fluides sous pression

Citations (13)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2015844A (en) 1978-02-28 1979-09-12 Comp Generale Electricite A device for detecting the presence of an object
US4572950A (en) 1981-12-21 1986-02-25 Battelle Memorial Institute Fiber-optical pressure detector
US4701614A (en) 1984-06-25 1987-10-20 Spectran Corporation Fiber optic pressure sensor
US4927232A (en) 1985-03-18 1990-05-22 G2 Systems Corporation Structural monitoring system using fiber optics
EP0419267A1 (fr) 1989-09-21 1991-03-27 Herga Electric Limited Acquisition et mesurage des signaux dans les systèmes optiques des fibres
JPH10153716A (ja) 1996-11-22 1998-06-09 Furukawa Electric Co Ltd:The 光ケーブルの道路敷設構造およびその道路敷設用の光ケーブル
WO1998026388A1 (fr) 1996-12-12 1998-06-18 Socoa International Holding S.A. Systeme de securite et procede d'utilisation associe
WO1999019697A1 (fr) * 1997-10-09 1999-04-22 Haenni Instruments Ag Capteur de force
WO2002065426A1 (fr) * 2001-02-15 2002-08-22 Qinetiq Ltd Surveillance du trafic
WO2004006200A2 (fr) 2002-07-04 2004-01-15 Lightspeed Inventions B.V. Organe de prehension pour ligne de signal et ligne de signal
WO2005034058A1 (fr) 2003-10-06 2005-04-14 Lightspeed Inventions B.V. Ligne electrique de signalisation, cloture et procede de fabrication d'une cloture
JP2005184772A (ja) 2003-09-12 2005-07-07 Oki Electric Ind Co Ltd 光ファイバセンサシステムおよび外力検知センサ
EP1571433A2 (fr) 2004-03-05 2005-09-07 Denso Corporation Dispositif de montage d'un capteur de charge pourvu d'une structure de protection du capteur

Patent Citations (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2015844A (en) 1978-02-28 1979-09-12 Comp Generale Electricite A device for detecting the presence of an object
US4572950A (en) 1981-12-21 1986-02-25 Battelle Memorial Institute Fiber-optical pressure detector
US4701614A (en) 1984-06-25 1987-10-20 Spectran Corporation Fiber optic pressure sensor
US4927232A (en) 1985-03-18 1990-05-22 G2 Systems Corporation Structural monitoring system using fiber optics
EP0419267A1 (fr) 1989-09-21 1991-03-27 Herga Electric Limited Acquisition et mesurage des signaux dans les systèmes optiques des fibres
JPH10153716A (ja) 1996-11-22 1998-06-09 Furukawa Electric Co Ltd:The 光ケーブルの道路敷設構造およびその道路敷設用の光ケーブル
WO1998026388A1 (fr) 1996-12-12 1998-06-18 Socoa International Holding S.A. Systeme de securite et procede d'utilisation associe
WO1999019697A1 (fr) * 1997-10-09 1999-04-22 Haenni Instruments Ag Capteur de force
WO2002065426A1 (fr) * 2001-02-15 2002-08-22 Qinetiq Ltd Surveillance du trafic
WO2004006200A2 (fr) 2002-07-04 2004-01-15 Lightspeed Inventions B.V. Organe de prehension pour ligne de signal et ligne de signal
JP2005184772A (ja) 2003-09-12 2005-07-07 Oki Electric Ind Co Ltd 光ファイバセンサシステムおよび外力検知センサ
WO2005034058A1 (fr) 2003-10-06 2005-04-14 Lightspeed Inventions B.V. Ligne electrique de signalisation, cloture et procede de fabrication d'une cloture
EP1571433A2 (fr) 2004-03-05 2005-09-07 Denso Corporation Dispositif de montage d'un capteur de charge pourvu d'une structure de protection du capteur

Also Published As

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ES2757906T3 (es) 2020-04-30
EP2997560A1 (fr) 2016-03-23
EP2997560B1 (fr) 2019-08-28
WO2014184144A1 (fr) 2014-11-20

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