| Literature DB >> 36236499 |
Meilin Qian1, Kai Zhao2, Binghao Li2, Henry Gong3, Aruna Seneviratne1.
Abstract
With the growing number of unintentional interactions occurring in underground mines, Collision Avoidance System (CAS) establishment and maintenance has become an urgent need for mining industries to enhance their risk profile and improve construction safety. Usually, most collision accidents can be divided into three different categories in line with the involved participants and infrastructure condition. The accidents pose a great risk of financial cost to mining companies and even cause casualties. In detail, this paper presents an intensive study survey of positioning techniques, including ranging algorithms, to accommodate the demands of various proximity sensors and improve the capability of situational awareness. Then, we exploit the importance of the communication system, prevalent low-power wide-area technologies and related communication protocols. The effectiveness of communication systems decides and facilitates the success of the final integrated system that can be used to fundamentally address the problem of collision avoidance. For the purpose of collaboration between communication systems and other executive departments, a series of systematic comparisons of pertinent technologies and algorithms is given near the end, followed by a brief discussion on the best choice among these options. In the proposed solution, the overall end-to-end delay can be minimised to a few nanoseconds and the localisation accuracy can achieve centimetre level when operating in the range of 100 m.Entities:
Keywords: collision avoidance; low-power wide-area communication; medium access control protocol; positioning techniques; underground mine
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36236499 PMCID: PMC9571763 DOI: 10.3390/s22197400
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.847
Figure 1The working flow diagram of a typical CAS.
Figure 2TOF—based distance measurement.
Figure 3TOA—based distance measurement.
Figure 4TDOA—based distance measurement.
Figure 5AOA—based distance measurement.
Figure 6Distribution of LPWA technologies in general wireless networks.
Figure 7Narrowband vs Spread Spectrum.
Requirements for the desired MAC protocol design and related works.
| Characteristics | Importance | Typical Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Distributed network | Mandatory | N/A |
| Contention-free Communication | Mandatory | N/A |
| Scheduling Protocol | Optional, good to have | N/A |
| Latency | Mandatory | SR-MAC, SW-MAC, DW-MAC, LDC-MAC |
| Energy consumption/overhearing | Mandatory | BBAD Mechanism, RANO Mechanism |
| Energy consumption/overhead | Mandatory | LO-MAC, LoBigMAC, LCO-MAC |
| Energy consumption/duty-cycling | Mandatory | BN-MAC, AP-MAC, SLACK-MAC |
| Scalability | Optional, good to have | SE-MAC, A Hybrid Protocol, SQ-MAC |
| Traffic Adaptability & Throughput | Optional, good to have traffic adaptability and high throughput | N/A |
| Handling mobility | Mandatory | N/A |
| Wake-up radio enabled | Optional, good to have | N/A |
Figure 8The Workflow of the FTDMA Protocol in the communication system.
Summary of Commercially Available CAS Products.
| Purpose | Company | Product | Technology | Application | Notes | URL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mine Site Technologies | Proximity Detection | low-frequency magnetic field | surface & underground mine | detection range: 0.5–20 m | ||
| Situational Awareness | on-board Wi-Fi or Bluetooth tag, RFID tracking tag | surface & underground mine | detection range: 60–120 m | |||
| NewTrax Technologies | Collision Warning System L7 | multiple radio frequency (RF) technologies | underground mine | precise ranging | ||
| Collision Warning System L8 | modular Newtrax Proximity Ranging Sensors (PRS) + L7 | underground mine | 360 degree awareness & ranging | |||
| Collsion Avoidance System L9 | Same as L8 | underground mine | intervention controls | |||
| Stanley Black & Decker | AeroScout | active RFID, WiFi (for communication) | underground mine | mobileView software; secure communications based on Cisco unified wireless networks | ||
| Minlog & MapTek | MineSuite | RFID tag (@ 433 MHz), WiFi tag (@ 2.4 GHz) | N/A | RFID: average detection range 50 m; WiFi: detection range, up to 100 m | ||
| CAS | Mine Radio Systems | Helian Underground Safety Solution | UHF RFID Tag, VLF RF communication | underground mine | visual alert via cap-lamp | |
| underground communication solutions | N/A | underground mine | voice, data and video | |||
| Industrea Limited | CAS GPS node | GPS, radio transceiver, Bluetooth wireless technology | mining | typically for light vehicles | ||
| Waytronic Security | collision avoidance | camera, ultrasonic detection | manufacturing | Forklift & pedestrian collision avoidance | ||
| InfoTronix | collision avoidance system | VLF magnetic fields | underground mine | special tag arrangement | ||
| Booyco Electronics | proximity detection, collision warning | RFID: close proximity detection—VLF; long range detection—UHF | underground mine | adjustable warning and danger zones | ||
| Blue Glue (BG) | Third Eye | active RFID Tags | mining | V2P, V2V and V2I (Vehicle to Infrastructure protection) | ||
| Blue electronics | Buddy Alert | TOF measuring (@ 2.4 hGHz, 900 MHz), GPS | outdoor | device mounted in vehicles | ||
| Orbit Communications | Body Guard | i-Tag | outdoor | magnetic mounting | ||
| Advanced Mining Technologies (AMT) | CAS-CAM/RF | camera, active sensing—RFID | surface mine | support speed detection | ||
| AcuMine | 4CAST | GPS and radio frequency signal strength | surface & underground mine | works effectively at both low and high speeds with the same sensitivity | ||
| PBE | proximity alert system | RFID, GPS, electromagnetics and bidirectional radar | surface & underground mine | combine multiple detection technologies; versatile configurations, suitable for different vehicle types | ||
| Minecom | Dynamic Anti Collision System (DACS600) | UHF RFID tags (operating @ 400 MHz) | mining | None | ||
| Gamma & Geosteering | TramGuard | low frequency magnetic field | underground, coal mine | fairly short operation range: 3.66 m | ||
| EV Alert | collision warning system | VHF short-range coded signal | rail crossing | selected frequency can ‘penetrate’ vehicles and buildings | ||
| CAS | Ivolve | PAMS Proximiti | GPS, radar | mining | long-range, high-speed GPS-based proximity awareness system; short-range, low-speed radar proximity detection capabilities | |
| LSM technologies | RadarEye | camera, radar | mining | virtually 360 degree viewing; radar sensor, detection range 2–20 m | ||
| IIT solutions | safe mine system | GPS, radar | mining | a special patented algorithm to calculate the path of vehicles | ||
| HxGN MineProtect Collision Avoidance System | GNSS, RF technologies | open pit mines | require no support infrastructure | |||
| Hexagon Mining | HxGN MineProtect Tracking Radar | tracking radar | open pit mines | operating range up to 30m | ||
| HxGN MineProtect Safety Center | smart camera and combination of above two systems | open pit mines | speed adaptability | |||
| Minetec | SafeDetect | RF-based mobile nodes, WASP technology developed by CSIRO | surface & underground mine | high-accuracy, low-latency, cm-level proximity detection | ||
| Minewest & Nautilus technology | BUDDY | magnetic field | underground, coal mine | integrated into cap-lamp | ||
| Becker | collision avoidance system | UHF, radar and electromagnetic field | surface & underground mine | a tri-technology solution | ||
| Modular Mining | MineAlert | GPS | surface mine | vehicle-to-vehicle only; intelligent path prediction based on vehicle velocity, acceleration and yaw rate | ||
| Matrix Design Group | IntelliZone | magnetic field with optional Lidar/Radar/ | underground, coal mine | machine-specific straight-line and angled zones | ||
| Preco electronics | PreView | radar, camera | surface & underground mine | various series of products | ||
| Caterpillar | MineStar Detect | camera, radar, GNSS | surface & underground mine | provide fatigue or distraction detection | ||
| Cat Detect | GPS, Bluetooth, WiFi, camera, radar | surface & underground mine | ||||
| Strata worldwide | HazardAvert | electromagnetic field | surface & underground mine | programmable at specific speeds | ||
| HazardAlarm | electromagnetic field | surface & underground mine | a single-generator system creates a large electromagnetic field | |||
| CAS | GE mining | CAS | surface—GPS tracking, RF unit and camera; underground—VLF magnetic and WiFi | surface & underground mine | real-time data connectivity; 12-year proven lifetime | |
| Jannatec | SmartHelmet | RFID tagging, camera | industrial environments | tailored to each individual customer | ||
| SmartView | multi-camera, WiFi & Bluetooth (for communication) | mining | voice/text/video communication | |||
| SmartTalk | N/A | industrial environments | 4G LTE radio | |||
| Schauenburg Systems | SCAS surface PDS | RFID, GPS, GSM, camera | surface mine | use time of flight, accuracy <1 m | ||
| SCAS underground PDS | cameras | underground mine | tag-less, artificial intelligent | |||
| Mine Wide Integrated Monitoring and Control System (MIMACS) | dual-band RF technology | surface & underground mine | 2-way Paging & Distress call | |||
| A&R Engineering | CAS | dual RF technology & time of flight | mining | detection accuracy of better than 1 m to a range of 30 m | ||
| Sense technologies | Gaurdian alert | doppler radar | outdoor driving | intended for light vehicles | ||
| SICK | proximity sensors | capacitor / magnetic field | manufacturing | N/A | ||
| detection and ranging | Lidar scanning, radar sensing | indoor & outdoor | 2D & 3D lidar scanning | |||
| distance sensors | optic and ultrasonic solutions | positioning | using triangulation and time-of-flight modes | |||
| Ogden safety systems | Sensor Vision System | multi-beam radar (@ 13.4–14.0 GHz) | quarry vehicles | FMCW principle | ||
| VMS (Quarry Vehicle Auto Braking System) | ||||||
| Joy Global, P&H (acquired by Komatsu) | Smartzone PDS | electromagnetic field | mining | faceboss integration—easy and quick troubleshooting | ||
| HawkEye camera system | fisheye cameras with infrared filters | mining | Digital Video Recorder (DVR)—100 to 200 h video | |||
| Intec Video Systems | Car Vision | camera | industrial | vehicle safety camera systems | ||
| PreView | radar, camera | low power 5.8 GHz radar signal | ||||
| Provix | proximity detection system | RFID, Radar and Sonar object detection | surface & underground mine | N/A | ||
| Septentrio | GNSS receivers | UHF radio, WiFi and Bluetooth (for communication) | mining and construction | N/A | ||
| CAS | MSHA | MSHA Proximity Detection | electromagnetic field | underground mine | tag-based | |
| Wabtec & GE Transportation | Digital Mine Collision Alert system (CAS) | magnetic field, RF and GPS | surface and underground mine | tag-based | ||
| Ifm Efector | O3M 3D Smart Sensor | optical technology | outdoor | 3D image data based on PMD technology | ||
| Frederick Energy Products | HIT-NOT | magnetic field | warehouse and industry workplaces | N/A | ||
| Rio Tinto (Borax mine) | positioning system | GPS | surface mine | N/A | ||
| Motion Metrics | ShovelMetrics | radar, thermal imaging | mining and construction | interface with our centralised data analysis platform | ||
| 3D Laser Mapping | SiteMonitor | laser scanning | mining | accuracy of 10 mm out of range up to 6000 m | ||
| Hitachi Mining | SkyAngle | camera | mining | bird’s-eye view | ||
| Aerial Angle | millimetre wave radar technology | mining | a peripheral vision display system with object detection technology | |||
| Vision only | Guardvant | ProxGuard CAS | GPS, radar and camera | mining | light vehicles and heavy equipment | |
| PROXIP | proximity detection system | encoded magnetic field | manufacturing | magnetic field generated by antenna works with electronic marker | ||
| Safety Vision | vision system | camera | wide range of application | N/A | ||
| ECCO | vision system | camera | wide range of application | N/A | ||
| Flir Systems | vision system | thermal camera | wide range of application | N/A | ||
| Nautitech | vision system | thermal camera | harsh environment | marker band identification during cutting cycles | ||
| HD and IR camera | harsh environment | available with Wi-Fi | ||||
| High Bandwidth Networks | N/A | surface and underground mine | fiber optic cables, Wi-Fi APs and mesh | |||
| Mine Site Technologies | Through-The-Earth Transmission | surface & underground mine | ultra low frequency RF signal | |||
| Leaky Feeder Radio | surface & underground mine | two-way voice and low-bandwidth data solution | ||||
| Communi- | Becker Varis | Vital Alert | underground mine | 2-way voice and data; VLF, electromagnetic induction | ||
| Cattron | SIAMnet | underground mine | voice and data; cable modem technology and coaxial cable | |||
| OTN systems | telecom network for mining | underground mine | N/A | |||
| MeshDynamics | third-generation of mesh network | surface and underground mine, coal mine | based on the Wi-Fi 802.11 protocol |
Overview and Comparison of Proximity Detection Technologies.
| Technology | Operating Range | Distance Accuracy | Update Rate | False Alarms | Interference | Deployment Effort | Operation Condition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal Camera | typically >150 m, min 10 m | vision only | real-time | unlikely | unlikely | high | LOS only |
| Thermal Camera | typically <100 m | vision only | real-time | likely | unlikely | high | LOS only |
| Infrared Camera | typically <10 m | vision only | real-time | likely | likely | high | LOS only |
| EM field (approx. 70–140 kHz) | typically 10–100 m (depends on power) | typically m level, ideally <1 m | typically ms level | often | likely | medium | slightly affected |
| Radar | continuous wave: short range; pulsed radar: <30 km | typically submeter level | typically ms level, <70 ms | likely | unlikely | low | LOS only |
| Lidar | long range: typically >100 m; short range: <50 m | typically cm or mm level | typically ms level, <10 ms | likely | unlikely | low | LOS only |
| Ultrasonic | typically <10 m | typically submetre level, ideally cm level | typically ms level | likely | unlikely | low | LOS only |
| RF signals | LF passive (@125 kHz, 134.3 kHz & 225 kHz): typically 10–30 cm, max 2 m; HF passive (@13.56 MHz): typically <1.5 m; UHF passive (@860–960 MHz): 1–50 m; UHF active (@433 MHz): typically 30 m–3 km; SHF active (@2.45 GHz): typically <100 m | proximity only | typically <100 ms (depends on frequency and distance) | often | likely | medium | LF: slightly affected by NLOS; HF: affected by NLOS; UHF & SHF: affected by NLOS profoundly |
| Bluetooth | Bluetooth 4.0: typically 10–30 m; BLE: average 80 m; long range beacon: typically 200 m | proximity only | Bluetooth: typically 100 ms; BLE: typically 3 ms | likely | likely | low | affected by NLOS |
| Zigbee | LOS: >300 m; indoor: average <100 m | 3–5 m | typically | likely | likely | medium | affected by NLOS |
| UWB | high data rate: <100 m; LOS using IEEE 802.15.4a: <200 m (depends on data rate) | <10 cm (based on ToF) | typically ns level | unlikely | unlikely | low | slightly affected |
Overview and Comparison of Positioning Techniques.
| Method | Accuracy | Power Consumption | System Capacity | Synchronisation Requirements | Out-Of-Area Positioning |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TOF | High | High | Low | No | No |
| TDOA | High | Low | High | Yes | Yes |
| TOA | High | Low | High | Yes | Yes |
| AOA | Low | Low | High | No | Yes |
Overview and Comparison of LPWA Techniques.
| Criteria | LECIM | RPMA | LoRa | SigFox | NB-IoT | Telensa | Weightless | LTE-M | IEEE 802.15.4 | IEEE 802.11ah |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| critical message delay: 15 s | typically 10–100 ms | typically 10–100 ms | typically 10–100 ms | typically 10–100 ms | typically 10–100 ms | typically 10–100 ms | typically <150 ms (excluding handover latency) | 0–20 s | 0–10 s |
|
| N/A | Low | Low | Low | High | Low | Low | High | N/A | |
|
| LOS: 20 km; NLOS: 5 km | urban: 15 km; LOS: 500 km | urban: 5 km; rural: 15 km | urban: 10 km; rural: 50 km | urban: 1km; rural: 10 km; typically <15 km | urban: 3 km; rural: 8 km | typically <10 km | typically <11 km | LOS: up to 20 km; NLOS: 5 km | 100–1000 m |
|
| typically 3 years | 10 years + | 10 years + | 10 years + | 5–10 years | 10 years + | 10 years + | 3–10 years | 802.15.4 is more energy efficient than 802.11ah | |
|
| 0.00153-125 kbps | uplink: 624 kbps; downlink: 156 kbps | CSS: typically 0.3-5 kbps, up to 10 kbps; FSK: 50 kbps | uplink: 100 bps; downlink: 600 bps | uplink: 64/158.5 kbps; downlink: 128/106 kbps | uplink: 62.5 bps; downlink: 500 bps | downlink: 0.0025-16.0 Mbps; uplink: 0.00025-0.5 Mbps | uplink: 1Mbps, up to 7 Mbps; downlink: 1 Mbps, up to 4 Mbps | 0.00153-125 kbps; 250 kbps (in 2.4 GHz) | 78 Mbps; 16 Mbps in sub-1 GHz |
|
| 433 MHz | 2.4 GHz ISM | sub-1 GHz ISM | sub-1 GHz ISM | 7–900 MHz | sub-1 GHz ISM | sub-1 GHz ISM | LTE band | sub-1 GHz ISM; 2.4 GHz (depends on different countries) | sub-1 GHz ISM |
|
| unlicensed only in Region 1, not including Australia (Region 3) | unlicensed | unlicensed | unlicensed | licensed | unlicensed | unlicensed | licensed | unlicensed | unlicensed |
|
| DPSK, GFSK | RPMA, DSSS | CSS, FSK | uplink: BPSK, DBPSK; downlink: GFSK | QPSK | 2-FSK | QAM, OQPSK, BPSK | uplnik: SC-FDMA, QAM; downlink: OFDMA, QAM | BPSK, FSK, OQPSK | OFDM |
|
| Critical infrastructure, environmental monitoring | Smart metering, Smart cities, Smart lighting | Smart metering, Smart cities, Smar building | Smart metering, Smart cities, Smart parking | Smart metering | Smart cities, Smart lighting, Smart parking | Smart metering, Asset tracking, Health monitoring | Smart street lighting, environmental conditions monitoring | Smart agriculture, Environment monitoring | Smart Cities, Smart Home |
Summary of Capable Features Based on Existing MAC Protocols.
| Year | Protocol | Categorization | Latency | Energy Consumption | Scalability | Traffic Adaptability | Throughput | Handling Mobility | Wake-Up Radio Enabled | Notes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overhearing | Overhead | Low Duty Cycle | ||||||||||
| 1988 | E2MaC | contention-free | YES | YES | QoS support | |||||||
| 2003 | T-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | balance between overhearing avoidance and maximum throughput | |||||||
| 2004 | MS-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | YES | QoS support | ||||||
| 2005 | S-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | YES | YES | per-node fairness; collision avoidance | |||||
| 2006 | FlexiMAC | contention-free | YES | YES | YES | fair access; data delivery guarantee | ||||||
| 2008 | DW-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | YES | YES | aim for bursty and high-traffic loads | |||||
| LCO-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | allow multi-hop transmission within one duty cycle | ||||||||
| eL-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | YES | suitable for low data rate networks | |||||||
| SASW-CR | contention-based | YES | YES | UWB-PHY; QoS support | ||||||||
| 2009 | TreeMAC | contention-free | YES | YES | 2D frame-slot assignment; for high data rate networks | |||||||
| 2010 | - | contention-free | YES | aim for low-data-rate WSNs | ||||||||
| VLA-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | YES | YES | optimised for burst transmission | ||||||
| 2011 | SQ-MAC | contention-based | YES | multimedia traffic QoS; self recovery | ||||||||
| GLASS | contention-free | YES | YES | YES | YES | aim for data-intensive sensor networks | ||||||
| 2012 | LDC-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | dual-channel transmission | |||||||
| 2013 | - | hybrid | YES | YES | for massive M2M networks | |||||||
| SR-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | multi-packet transmission within one operational cycle | ||||||||
| LO-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | YES | YES | YES | aim for low-data-rate WSNs | |||||
| PD-MAC | contention-free | YES | optimisation of scheduling scheme and slot assignment to maximise spatial reuse factor | |||||||||
| FTDMA | contention-free | YES | YES | YES | YES | YES | YES | controlled by cluster heads assigned distributively | ||||
| ECOMP | contention-free | YES | YES | clustering; ring configuration | ||||||||
| 2014 | - | hybrid | YES | convention-based CSMA + reservation-based TDMA; QoS support | ||||||||
| SW-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | YES | scout-based scheduling | |||||||
| BN-MAC | hybrid | YES | YES | YES | Least Distance Smart Neighbouring Search model | |||||||
| RANO | contention-based | YES | YES | active RFID protocol | ||||||||
| CT-MAC | contention-based | YES | suitable for direct sequence UWB system | |||||||||
| 2015 | SE-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | YES | Adaptable Application Independent Aggregation model | ||||||
| OPC | contention-based | YES | YES | parallel transmission based on local concurrency map | ||||||||
| EH-RDFSA | contention-based | YES | YES | energy harvesting for temporary energy shortages | ||||||||
| H-TSAC | contention-free | YES | YES | hierarchical link scheduling with proactive time slots acquisition | ||||||||
| 2016 | - | contention-free | YES | modifies IEEE 802.15.4; minimum risk of frame collisions | ||||||||
| 2017 | BigMAC | contention-free | YES | receiver-initiated; tree topology | ||||||||
| SLACK-MAC | contention-based | YES | self-adaptive; history-based | |||||||||
| 2018 | AP-MAC | contention-based | YES | YES | self-adaption; collision reconnect mechanism | |||||||
| BBAD | contention-based | YES | YES | YES | address decoding and validation; increased system capacity | |||||||