Smart Brick??
OK, - this is cool. But will it get along with
dumb mortar?
Smart bricks could monitor buildings, save
lives
A "smart brick"
developed by scientists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign could
monitor a building's health and save lives. "This innovation could change the
face of the construction industry," said Chang Liu, a professor of electrical
and computer engineering at Illinois. "We are living with more and more smart
electronics all around us, but we still live and work in fairly dumb buildings.
By making our buildings smarter, we can improve both our comfort and safety."
From University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
:
Smart bricks could
monitor buildings, save lives
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- A "smart
brick" developed by scientists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
could monitor a building's health and save lives.
"This innovation could change
the face of the construction industry," said Chang Liu, a professor of
electrical and computer engineering at Illinois. "We are living with more and
more smart electronics all around us, but we still live and work in fairly dumb
buildings. By making our buildings smarter, we can improve both our comfort and
safety."
In work performed
through the university's Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology, Liu and
graduate student Jon Engel have combined sensor fusion, signal processing,
wireless technology and basic construction material into a multi-modal sensor
package that can report building conditions to a remote operator.
The prototype has a thermistor,
two-axis accelerometer, multiplexer, transmitter, antenna and battery hidden
inside a brick. Built into a wall, the brick could monitor a building's
temperature, vibration and movement. Such information could be vital to
firefighters battling a blazing skyscraper, or to rescue workers ascertaining
the soundness of an earthquake-damaged structure.
"Our proof-of-concept brick is
just one example of where you can have the sensor, signal processor, wireless
communication link and battery packaged in one compact unit," Liu said. "You
also could embed the sensor circuitry in concrete blocks, laminated beams,
structural steel and many other building materials."
To extend battery life, the
brick could transmit building conditions at regular intervals, instead of
operating continuously, Liu said. The battery could also be charged through the
brick by an inductive coil, similar to those used in electric toothbrushes and
certain artificial heart pumps.
The researchers are currently
using off-the-shelf components in their smart bricks, so there is "lots of room
for making the sensor package smaller," Engel said. "Ultimately, we would like
to fit everything onto one chip, and then put that chip on a piece of plastic,
instead of silicon, to make it more robust."
Silicon is a rigid, brittle
material, which can easily crack or break. "Sensor packages built on flexible
substrates would not only be more resilient," Engel said, "they would offer
additional versatility. For example, you could wrap a flexible sensor around the
iron reinforcing bars that strengthen concrete and then monitor the strain."
Liu and Engel have already
crafted such sensors by depositing metal films on flexible polymer substrates.
Dubbed "smart skin" by its inventors, the sensor material can be wrapped around
any surface of interest, such as a robotic finger. "While a typical tactile
sensor can only measure surface roughness, our sensor material can determine
roughness, hardness, temperature and conductivity," Liu said. "The combined
input gives you a much better idea of the type of material being touched."
The researchers' smart skin is
fabricated at the university's Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory. Although the
skin is not yet wireless, Engel is working on the analog-to-digital conversion
process to utilize existing wireless technology.
The smart bricks, however, are
fully wireless. In addition to keeping tabs on a building's health, applications
include monitoring nurseries, daycares and senior homes, and creating
interactive "smart toys" that respond to the touch of a child.
"In a smart doll, for example,
sensor capability would distinguish between caressing and slapping, allowing the
doll to react accordingly," Liu said. "In the gaming industry, wireless sensors
attached to a person's arms and legs could replace the conventional joystick and
allow a 'couch potato' to get some physical exercise while playing video games
such as basketball or tennis. The opportunities seem endless."
Posted: Mon - June 16, 2003 at 12:03 AM