A Vibration Sensing Device Using a Six-Axis IMU and an Optimized Beam Structure for Activity Monitoring

Sensors (Basel). 2023 Sep 23;23(19):8045. doi: 10.3390/s23198045.

Abstract

Activity monitoring of living creatures based on the structural vibration of ambient objects is a promising method. For vibration measurement, multi-axial inertial measurement units (IMUs) offer a high sampling rate and a small size compared to geophones, but have higher intrinsic noise. This work proposes a sensing device that combines a single six-axis IMU with a beam structure to enable measurement of small vibrations. The beam structure is integrated into the PCB of the sensing device and connects the IMU to the ambient object. The beam is designed with finite element method (FEM) and optimized to maximize the vibration amplitude. Furthermore, the beam oscillation creates simultaneous translation and rotation of the IMU, which is measured with its accelerometers and gyroscopes. On this basis, a novel sensor fusion algorithm is presented that adaptively combines IMU data in the wavelet domain to reduce intrinsic sensor noise. In experimental evaluation, the proposed sensing device using a beam structure achieves a 6.2-times-higher vibration amplitude and an increase in signal energy of 480% when compared to a directly mounted IMU without a beam. The sensor fusion algorithm provides a noise reduction of 5.6% by fusing accelerometer and gyroscope data at 103 Hz.

Keywords: activity estimation; inertial measurement unit; sensor fusion; signal processing; structural vibration measurement.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding. We acknowledge support by the Open Access Publication Fund of the Westphalian University of Applied Sciences.