| Literature DB >> 30486361 |
Hang Xu1,2, Jun Qiao3,4, Jianguo Zhang5,6, Hong Han7,8, Jingxia Li9,10, Li Liu11,12, Bingjie Wang13,14.
Abstract
A high-resolution leaky coaxial cable (LCX) sensor for perimeter intrusion detection is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. In our proposed sensor system, a wideband Boolean-chaos signal is used as the probe signal, and a pair of leaky coaxial cables (LCXs) is applied for transmitting the probe signal and receiving the echo signal, respectively. By correlating the chaotic echo signal with its delayed duplicate and comparing the correlation traces before and after intrusion, the intruder can be accurately located. Experimental results demonstrate the proposed sensor can simultaneously detect multiple intruders. The range resolution reaches 30 cm, whilst the dynamic range can achieve 50 dB. In addition, this sensor possesses the excellent anti-interference performance to the noise and uncorrelated chaotic signal, which makes it show robust performance in the detection environment with noise or multiple chaotic LCX sensors cooperation.Entities:
Keywords: Boolean-chaos signal; leaky coaxial cable (LCX) sensor; perimeter intrusion detection
Year: 2018 PMID: 30486361 PMCID: PMC6308410 DOI: 10.3390/s18124154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Experimental setup of the LCX sensor utilizing a wideband chaotic signal.
The main parameters of the devices used in our proposed LCX sensor.
| Devices | Pass-Band/Bandwidth | Other Parameters |
|---|---|---|
| Power amplifier | 75 Hz–10 GHz | Max gain: 25 dB |
| Directional coupler | 1 MHz–1 GHz | Coupling degree: 15 dB |
Figure 2Schematic diagram of the Boolean-chaos signal generator.
Figure 3(a) Temporal waveform, (b) power spectrum, and (c) autocorrelation trace of the Boolean-chaos signal.
Figure 4Measurement principle of the proposed LCX sensor (a) before and (b) after intrusion.
Figure 5(a) Experimental scene of intrusion detection. (b) Detection results before and after intrusion. (c) Final intrusion detection result.
Figure 6Detection results of intrusion process.
Figure 7(a) Detection results of different intrusion distances. (b) Dynamic range analysis of our sensor.
Figure 8Variation of relative error δ with the increase of detection distance x.
Figure 9Detection results of (a) two intruders, (b) three intruders and (c) four intruders.
Figure 10Detection results of two intruders with different spacing distances.
Figure 11Temporal waveform of (a1) noise and (b1) chaotic interference signal. Crosscorrelation traces of (a2) noise and chaotic reference signal, (b2) chaotic interference signal and chaotic reference signal. Comparison of detection results with and without (a3) noise and (b3) chaotic interference signal.