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Wheel-Based Ice Sensors for Road Vehicles
- Monday, 24 October 2011
Ice would be sensed via its electric permittivity.
Wheel-based sensors for detection of
ice on roads and approximate measurement
of the thickness of the ice are
under development. These sensors
could be used to alert drivers to hazardous
local icing conditions in real
time. In addition, local ice-thickness
measurements by these sensors could
serve as guidance for the minimum
amount of sand and salt required to be
dispensed locally onto road surfaces to
ensure safety, thereby helping road
crews to utilize their total supplies of
sand and salt more efficiently.
Multiple Electrodes Embedded in a Tire near its outer surface would be excited with alternating voltages. The capacitance between the electrodes at the bottom would be measured as an indication of the thickness of ice (if any) on the road." class="caption" align="right">Like some aircraft wing-surface ice
sensors described in a number of previous
NASA Tech Briefs articles, the wheel-based
ice sensors are based, variously, on
measurements of changes in capacitance
and/or in radio-frequency impedance
as affected by ice on surfaces. In
the case of ice on road surfaces, the
measurable changes in capacitance
and/or impedance are attributable to
differences among the electric permittivities
of air, ice, water, concrete, and
soil. In addition, a related phenomenon
that can be useful for distinguishing
between ice and water is a specific transition
in the permittivity of ice at a temperature-
dependent frequency. This feature
also provides a continuous calibration
of the sensor to allow for changing
road conditions.
Several configurations of wheel-based
ice sensors are under consideration. For
example, in a simple two-electrode capacitor
configuration, one of the electrodes
would be a circumferential electrode
within a tire, and the ground would be
used as the second electrode. Optionally,
the steel belts that are already standard
parts of many tires could be used as the
circumferential electrodes. In another
example (see figure), multiple electrodes
would be embedded in rubber between
the steel belt and the outer tire surface.
These electrodes would be excited in alternating polarities at one or more suitable
audio or radio frequencies to provide
nearly continuous monitoring of the
road surface under the tire. In still another
example, one or more microwave
stripline(s) or coplanar waveguide(s)
would be embedded in a tire near its
outer surface; in comparison with lower-frequency
capacitive devices, a device of
this type could be more sensitive.
This work was done by G. Dickey Arndt, Patrick W. Fink, and Phong H. Ngo of Johnson Space Center and James R. Carl (independent consultant). MSC-23565-1
This Brief includes a Technical Support Package (TSP).
Wheel-Based Ice Sensors for Road Vehicles (reference MSC-23565-1) is currently available for download from the TSP library.
Please Login at the top of the page to download.

