To gaming enthusiasts, the Kinect is Microsoft’s motion sensor add-on for the Xbox 360 gaming console. The device provides a natural user interface that allows users to interact intuitively and without any intermediary device, such as a controller. Now, a team of Rensselaer researchers has used the device to replace expensive sensors on its geotechnical centrifuge to better (and more economically) understand how levees fail when overtopped by large floods. The interdisciplinary project, funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), focused on soil erosion, levees, and flood protection systems.
To provide essential data for the rebuilding of the ravaged levees in New Orleans, for the past 10 years engineers from the School of Engineering have been studying small-scale sections of the flood-protection system.
“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that a Kinect system has been used on a geotechnical centrifuge,” said Thomas Zimmie, a dam safety expert and professor of civil engineering. “The objective of this research is to develop tools that would improve the understanding of the process of levee failure because of erosion and reduce the future risk of failure in order to protect lives and property.”
In addition to Zimmie, the team that worked on the project included Barbara Cutler, associate professor of computer science; W. Randolph Franklin, professor in the Department of Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering; and civil engineering Ph.D. graduate Mehrad Kamalzare ’13, who has joined the faculty at Cal Poly Pomona, and serves as an assistant professor in the Department of Civil Engineering.
During recent decades, there have been continuing efforts to study dam-break hydraulics, including numerical and experimental investigations of dam-break flows and the potential damage caused by the flows.
According to Zimmie, hydraulic erosion is a complicated phenomenon and depends on many different parameters. To improve design criteria for levees, embankments, and earthen structures, the development of realistic computer models that can simulate the erosion process is necessary.
As part of the research, a large number of physical levee erosion tests were performed using Rensselaer’s 150 g-ton geotechnical centrifuge. The centrifuge tests were performed to simulate real-size levees, in order to obtain a more realistic model. The erosion was modeled physically in detail.
Conventional three-dimensional scanning was used to precisely verify the calculated dimensions of initial and final computer model geometries, but did not yield interim data or measurements of the quantity of eroded soil during the tests.
The Kinect sensor was used to follow the progression of the soil erosion. The device was used to scan and evaluate the volume of eroded soil and variation of the shape of the channels as a function of time. Three-dimensional images were obtained, and variations of different parameters were plotted.
“Real-time field measurements are extremely difficult to obtain,” Zimmie said. “Numerical simulations play an ever-important role for dam-break flow problems. The erosion process is dependent on several parameters such as soil fines and clay size content, plasticity and dispersivity, compaction water content, density degree of saturation, clay mineralogy, and possibly the presence of cementing materials such as iron oxides.”
Based on recorded videos and pictures taken during the tests, it was discovered that the Kinect results agreed well with the physical models. The technical capabilities of the Kinect system can be duplicated in a custom design, but the cost could be several thousand dollars, Zimmie noted.
For the research team, the Kinect served as a low-cost sensor, enabling the measurement of the rate of soil erosion, which, if done at all, usually requires expensive equipment. The application of this method in other laboratory experiments was also investigated by the team.
Zimmie has been heavily involved with studies on the New Orleans levee failures caused by Hurricane Katrina. He was part of an NSF-sponsored investigative team that went to New Orleans shortly after Katrina. Zimmie also testified before the U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works committee that was holding hearings on Katrina levee failures. Since then, work on the levees has continued, in cooperation with the Corps of Engineers, using the Rensselaer geotechnical centrifuge, and this work also received a lot of interest from the media and various committees studying Katrina events.