Abstract

Abstract. We present a custom acoustic emission (AE) monitoring system designed to perform long-term measurements on high-alpine rock walls. AE monitoring is a common technique for characterizing damage evolution in solid materials. The system is based on a two-channel AE sensor node (AE-node) integrated into a wireless sensor network (WSN) customized for operation in harsh environments. This wireless architecture offers flexibility in the deployment of AE-nodes at any position of the rock wall that needs to be monitored, within a range of a few hundred meters from a core station connected to the internet. The system achieves near real-time data delivery and allows the user to remotely control the AE detection threshold. In order to protect AE sensors and capture acoustic signals from specific depths of the rock wall, a special casing was developed. The monitoring system is completed by two probes that measure rock temperature and liquid water content, both probes being also integrated into the WSN. We report a first deployment of the monitoring system on a rock wall at Jungfraujoch, 3500 m a.s.l., Switzerland. While this first deployment of the monitoring system aims to support fundamental research on processes that damage rock under cold climate, the system could serve a number of other applications, including rock fall hazard surveillance or structural monitoring of concrete structures.

Highlights

  • Acoustic emission monitoring is a powerful non-destructive method to characterize progressive damage and deformation processes of materials that has a wide range of possible applications in engineering, material sciences, and for the detection of potential natural hazards (Michlmayr et al, 2012)

  • In order to address these two main challenges, we have developed a custom acoustic emission (AE) monitoring system that consists of (i) the AE-node, a two-channel acquisition system that transmits AE data using a wireless sensor network (WSN) customized for operation in harsh environments (Beutel et al, 2009; Hasler et al, 2011) and (ii) a special casing that houses an AE sensor inside a borehole and allows it to retrieve acoustic signals from specific depths of a rock wall (e.g. 10 and 50 cm) (Weber et al, 2012)

  • We have presented a custom AE platform designed for continuous monitoring of AEs in rock walls under harsh environmental conditions

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Summary

Methods and Data

A custom acoustic emission monitoring system for harsh environments: application to freezing-induced damage in alpine rock walls. Discuss.: 15 June 2012 Revised: 3 October 2012 – Accepted: 4 October 2012 – Published: 5 November 2012

Introduction
Geoscientific requirements
Technical specifications
Architecture
System performance
A casing to accommodate acoustic transducers
Additional measurements: rock temperature and moisture content
50 Backbone
Temperature probe
Capacitance probe to estimate moisture content
Deployment of two systems
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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