It is currently Fri Sep 10, 2010 2:58 am




Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 1 post ] 
 Networked Sensors Track Firefighters to Get Them Out Alive 
Author Message
Site Admin
User avatar

Joined: Wed Aug 27, 2008 12:00 am
Posts: 409
Post Networked Sensors Track Firefighters to Get Them Out Alive
Networked Sensors Track Firefighters to Get Them Out Alive

A new system could help firefighters survive deadly blazes and find fallen comrades in the smoke
By Sandeep Ravindran
POPSCI.COM

Image
Fire Escape Graham Murdoch

This month, James Duckworth and David Cyganski, engineering professors at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, will fill a building with expensive sensors—10 years’ worth of R&D—and set the whole place on fire. If their system works in the 1,100ºF inferno produced inside the Massachusetts Firefighting Academy’s burn building, the tech could give a fire chief everything he needs to make sure his crew returns safe and sound every time.

Ironically, the very gear that allows a modern firefighter to run into a burning building also puts his life at risk. Fire-retardant jackets deflect flames so well that firefighters can stay in a burning building until just before flashover, the moment when the room reaches 1,100°F and all the combustible gases in the air—and pretty much everything else—ignite. “Years ago, before we got hoods, we’d burn our ears and necks, and that would tell us ‘That’s too frickin’ hot, let’s get out,’ ” says Gerard Dio, chief of the Worcester, Massachusetts, fire department, which is helping test the system. Now, firemen feel the intense heat only when it’s seconds from flashover.

The new system involves portable sensors that register room temperature. With further testing, it could warn firefighters of flashover a minute before it occurs—enough time to dash out. It also tracks firefighters’ whereabouts in the blaze. Sensors attached to their harnesses and face masks beam their locations and vital signs (heart attacks account for half of all firefighter deaths) to a commander’s laptop outside.

The researchers hope to have the system in the field by 2013. “Considering that they’re risking their lives, it’s pathetic that firefighters are using what’s essentially 19th-century technology,” Duckworth says. “This will bring them up to date.” It certainly hits home for Dio. During a 1999 five-alarm warehouse fire, two of his men got lost in the smoke, and four others rushed in to rescue them. All six died. “I know we did the best job we could at the time,” Dio says, “but this system could have saved all of their lives.”

HOW IT WORKS

Image
Gear Up: Graham Murdoch

STEP 1: GEAR UP

The commander uses his laptop to activate radio receivers on the trucks’ ladders, location beacons strapped to firemen’s uniforms, and sensors in their face masks that measure pulse, blood-oxygen levels and breathing rates.

Image
Drop the Box: Graham Murdoch

STEP 2: DROP THE BOX

Firefighters enter the building, identify the source of the blaze, and deploy an environment-sensor box that extends a mast to measure floor-to-ceiling heat differences.

Image
Collect Data: Graham Murdoch

STEP 3: COLLECT DATA

The environment sensor beams temperatures to ladder-mounted receivers that relay info to the commander outside. Health sensors indicate everyone’s vital signs, and location sensors use radar and radio to pinpoint firefighters’ whereabouts to within three feet.

Image
See the Scene: Graham Murdoch

STEP 4: SEE THE SCENE

The commander’s laptop shows where firefighters are, and their icons transition from green to red if their health is failing. If sensors report that a room will soon reach the 1,100°F flashover point, the commander issues a “clear out” command over a radio.


Thu Feb 25, 2010 11:28 pm
Profile E-mail WWW
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 1 post ] 


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
cron Return to RIDE BACKWARDS

Powered by phpBB © phpBB Group.
Designed by Vjacheslav Trushkin for Free Forums/DivisionCore.