1 / 30

Miner Tracking System

Miner Tracking System. Group 28 Brent Floyd Steven Judd Chad Smith. Introduction. Design miner location system to aid in the event of an emergency System uses RFID tags and wireless transmitters to relay who/where information back to a database program. Motivation.

daktari
Download Presentation

Miner Tracking System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Miner Tracking System Group 28 Brent Floyd Steven Judd Chad Smith

  2. Introduction • Design miner location system to aid in the event of an emergency • System uses RFID tags and wireless transmitters to relay who/where information back to a database program

  3. Motivation • Motivated by the recent tragedies in WV, Canada, and Mexico • Rescue efforts were hindered by unknown locations of trapped miners

  4. Objectives • Provide real-time location of all miners • Use existing power supplies to operate all devices • Provide emergency backup in case of power failure • Decrease rescue team’s response time

  5. The Miner Tracking System

  6. Block Diagram

  7. RFID Tags • Tags placed along mine walls/roof • Unique tag ID corresponds to specific location • Passive tags keep cost low

  8. Helmet Module • Includes Circuitry for reader, transmitter, and power converters • Designed to eventually be as a small box attached to their battery

  9. Helmet Module (Schematic)

  10. Helmet Module (Reader) • TI RFID Series 2000 Micro-Reader • Supply Voltage: 9V • Supply Current: 100mA • Operating Frequency: 134.2 kHz • RS232 Output • 47 µH antenna • Used to read tag IDs

  11. Helmet Module (Transmitter) • Takes RS232 signal from reader • Converts to TTL using Max232 chip • Broadcasts converted signal to wireless network using XBee transmitter

  12. Helmet Module (Power) • Use existing 12V battery to supply unit • 3 DC/DC converters used to supply 9V, 5V, 3.3V to Reader, MAX232, XBee • Total Power: 1.33W

  13. Helmet Module (Power) • 3.3 VDC Voltage Regulator Circuit • Other voltage sources use same design different parameter values

  14. Wireless Network • Implemented by an array of Xbee nodes • Intended to be a mesh network for increased reliability • Implemented point-to-point network due to limitations in current version of chip

  15. Wireless Network • Powered by battery back-up circuit that converts existing mine power to 3.3 VDC • For demonstration / testing used 2 AA batteries per node

  16. Battery Back-up • 2 modes: Battery charging, Battery back-up • Utilizes existing 120VAC power • Over 24 hours of back-up power

  17. Battery Back-up

  18. Computer Interface • Receiver collects signals from wireless network • Converts signal to RS232 via Max232

  19. Computer Database • Microsoft Access Database, programmed with Visual Basic • Takes RS232 Data from COM port • Enters into database and updates the map with real-time locations

  20. Component Testing (XBee) • Range Testing Indoors/Outdoors • Input voltage range: 1.9-3.4V

  21. Component Testing (RFID Tags) • TI sent multiple types of tags • For future testing only B and D tags should be used

  22. Component Testing (Power)

  23. Component Testing (Back-up) • Verified output with AC power on • Verified output with AC power off • XBee worked continuously while plugging and unplugging AC power supply • After 24 hours output voltage was 2.7V

  24. System Testing • 2nd floor Everitt • 1 roaming helmet node • 3 relay nodes • 1 computer node • 6 Tags • Successful reading/transfer of all 6 locations

  25. Ethical Issues • Dependability: The system, in its current state, is not 100% failsafe, and should not be implemented until that testing is complete. Its intent is to save lives and must not fail in time of need. • MSHA: Thoroughly go over guidelines for permissibility testing and safety

  26. Successes • Small scale proof of concept • Removal of interface boards • Battery back-up integration • Database performance

  27. Challenges • Power circuits • Reliability of helmet circuitry • Wireless network limitations

  28. Recommendations • Update XBee with mesh network capabilities • Make database separate executable • Longer range RFID reader • Increase scope of testing (underground, more nodes, etc.)

  29. Credits • Professor Carney • Alex Spektor • Texas Instruments • National Semiconductor • Supertex Inc.

  30. Questions?

More Related