Sensors (May 2021)
A Low-Cost Instrumentation System for Seismic Hazard Assessment in Urban Areas
Abstract
The development and application of a low-cost instrumentation system for seismic hazard assessment in urban areas are described in the present study. The system comprises a number of autonomous triaxial accelerographs, designed and manufactured in house and together with dedicated software for device configuration, data collection and further postprocessing. The main objective is to produce a detailed view of strong motion variability in urban areas, for at least light intensity strong motion events. The overall cost of the developed devices is at least ten times lower than the respective commercial units, hence their deployment as an ultra-dense network over the area of interest can be significantly cost-effective. This approach is considered an efficient complement to traditional microzonation procedures, which are typically based on relatively few actual recordings and the application of theoretical methodologies to assess the strong motion distribution. The manufactured devices adopt micro-electro-mechanical (MEMS) digital sensor technology for recording acceleration, whereas the accompanying software suite provides various configuration options, quick browsing, analyzing and exporting of the recorded events, as well as GIS type functionality for seamlessly producing explicit seismic hazard maps of the considered area. The evaluation of system performance was based on shaking table and real field comparisons against high accuracy commercial accelerographs. The study concludes with a real application of the proposed system in the form of an ultra-dense network installed at the city of Lefkada, an earthquake prone urban area in Greece, and the following compilation of explicit shakemaps.
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