Skip to main content

FOSA win for Fotech

Road surface vibrations are being monitored via fibre optic cable in the UK to gain valuable data about roadside air quality.
By David Arminas April 8, 2022 Read time: 3 mins
Fotech’s DAS technology sends thousands of pulses of light along a fibre optic cable every second and monitors the fine pattern of light reflected back (image courtesy Fotech)

Fibre optic distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) technology from Fotech has proven itself in a UK roadisde air quality project, winning an international award along the way.

Fotech picked up the 2021 Project of the Year award from FOSA – the Fiber Optic Sensing Association. FOSA is a non-profit organisation created in Washington DC in 2017 with the mission of educating industry, government and the public on the benefits of fibre optic sensing.

The aim of the Air Quality Simulation Project, led by Staffordshire County Council, is to improve the air quality at the busy A52/A520 Cellarhead crossroads. The project required a comprehensive traffic simulation model using data obtained from fibre optic sensing.  
 
There will be a reduction of nitrogen oxide (NOx) and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions thanks to a worldwide trend to move from petrol- and diesel-powered vehicles to electric vehicles. However, the arguably more serious particulate (PMx) emissions could increase with the growing uptake of electric vehicles which are typically heavier and cause more wear and tear to tyres and road surfaces. Keeping these vehicles moving smoothly without unnecessary braking will pay dividends for curbing these often-overlooked emissions.  
 
With this in mind, the Air Quality Simulation Project was established to look at improving air quality through smart traffic management.
 
Fotech’s DAS technology was implemented on around 1km of standard telecommunications fibre in each direction from the Cellarhead crossroads. This was to detect, classify, locate and track vehicles travelling towards the junction. DAS technology essentially turns the fibre optic cable network into thousands of vibration sensors that can detect vehicles over as distance of several kilometres.
 
The technology sends thousands of pulses of light along a cable every second and monitors the fine pattern of light reflected back. When acoustic or vibrational energy – such as that created by a passing vehicle – creates a strain on the optical fibre, this changes the reflected light pattern. By using advanced algorithms and processing techniques, DAS analyses these changes to identify and categorise the disturbance. Each type of disturbance has its own signature and the technology can tell an operator in real-time what happened, exactly where it happened and when it happened.
 
Vital to creating the traffic simulation model were Fotech’s special machine learning to monitor vehicles with a very high degree of confidence. The technology easily distinguished between vehicle types such as cars, light- and heavy-duty vehicles and, by monitoring their movements, anticipated their arrival times at the crossroads.
 
In the next phase of the project, data from the traffic simulation model will feed into smart traffic control algorithms which can be used to schedule the lights in a way that allows deceleration and acceleration to be reduced. This will keep vehicles moving more freely - particularly the heavier polluters - and cut emissions caused by stop-start traffic.
 
One of the main benefits of DAS technology is its ability to provide real-time data. This data may be used to make real-time changes to traffic light phasing and improve traffic flow in the wider project. The success of this model has much wider implications, however, with DAS becoming central to calculating vehicle emissions, managing traffic flow and reducing congestion.  
 
If future trials of the smart traffic systems in Cellarhead are equally successful, they open up a new application for DAS. It will be the first time that DAS has been used to manage traffic flow to reduce emissions and improve air quality.
 
Fotech says that it is expected that standard telecommunication fibre optic cables integrated with DAS technology could reduce emissions significantly, cutting NOx, CO2 and PMx by between 10% and 20%

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Texas highway widening project
    May 9, 2022
    A major Texas highway widening project is planned.
  • Free flow tolling technology is booming
    April 10, 2013
    Jon Masters reports on the latest moves in the free-flow tolling segment. Free-flow tolling of roads and discrete infrastructure, such as bridges and tunnels, is an area of transportation that appears to be booming. Tolling in general is on the up, often still as a means for funding road projects where public sector budgets can no longer cover the necessary costs, but not exclusively so. Several high profile examples of road user charging for ‘demand management’ – the reduction of congestion as part of a wi
  • Nynas and Shell in Hanson UK bio-binder trial
    March 6, 2023
    Hanson UK is using Nynas’s biogenic binder Nypol RE in one asphalt mixture and Shell’s new bio-component binder Cariphalte CarbonSink in the second mix.
  • ERIC 2016: What shape the ‘Smart Road’?
    February 7, 2017
    Optimism about the future of highways worldwide abounded at the inaugural European Road Infrastructure Conference (ERIC) in Leeds, UK Around 500 delegates passed through the varied sessions during the three-day event at the Royal Armouries Museum in the northern English city of Leeds. They came away with many visions of what a motorway and road could look like. But what speakers at the event - co-organised by the Brussels-based European Union Road Federation (ERF) and the UK’s Road Safety Markings Ass