540 Infrastructure-Leveraging Sensing
Learning Objectives
After completing this chapter, you will be able to:
- Understand how to use existing infrastructure as sensors
- Apply Wi-Fi sensing for presence and gesture detection
- Use power meters for appliance identification (NILM)
- Design sensing systems that leverage installed equipment
540.1 Prerequisites
- Sensor Classification: Types of sensors
- Braitenberg Model: Sensor-behavior relationships
540.2 Infrastructure-Leveraging Sensing: Using What’s Already There
540.2.1 The Smart Approach: Don’t Deploy New Sensors, Use What Exists
Traditional IoT thinking: “We need temperature data -> Deploy temperature sensors.”
Infrastructure-leveraging thinking: “We need occupancy data -> Use existing Wi-Fi routers.”
This paradigm shift–leveraging existing infrastructure instead of deploying dedicated sensors–can reduce costs by 10-100x while providing area-wide coverage instead of point measurements.
Imagine you want to detect if someone is in a room. Traditional approach:
Deploy Dedicated Sensors ($$$): - Buy PIR motion sensors ($15 each) - Install wiring and power - Calibrate and maintain batteries - Get point measurements (one spot per sensor)
Leverage Infrastructure ($0): - Use existing Wi-Fi router (already there!) - Detect phone/device connections - Get room-wide coverage - No installation, no batteries, no maintenance
The Wi-Fi router becomes a “free” presence sensor. This is infrastructure-leveraging sensing–using existing devices as sensors.
540.3 Core Principle: Indirect Sensing via Existing Infrastructure
Instead of deploying new sensors, extract sensing information from infrastructure already in place:
| Infrastructure | Traditional Use | Sensing Capability | What It Measures |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wi-Fi Router | Internet connectivity | RSSI, CSI, device count | Presence, gestures, breathing, occupancy |
| Power Meter | Energy billing | Current waveform analysis | Appliance identification (NILM) |
| Cell Tower | Mobile calls/data | Handoff patterns, signal strength | Traffic density, crowd size, movement |
| Street Light | Illumination | Current draw, vibration | Pedestrian count, vehicle detection |
| Water Pipe | Water delivery | Acoustic vibrations | Leak detection, flow rate |
| HVAC Ducts | Climate control | Airflow patterns | Occupancy, room-level activity |
Key Insight: Every piece of infrastructure emits signals. We can sense the world by observing how the environment disturbs these signals.
540.4 Comparison: Deploy vs Leverage
| Dimension | Deploy Dedicated Sensors | Infrastructure-Leveraging |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront Cost | $10-100 per sensor point | $0 marginal cost (already installed) |
| Installation | Drilling, wiring, positioning | Software-only deployment |
| Coverage | Point measurements (discrete) | Area-wide coverage (continuous) |
| Maintenance | Battery replacement, calibration | Minimal (infrastructure already maintained) |
| Privacy | Obvious sensors (cameras visible) | Less intrusive (passive RF sensing) |
| Accuracy | High (purpose-built) | Moderate (indirect inference) |
| Latency | Immediate (direct sensing) | May require processing (feature extraction) |
When to Choose What: - Deploy sensors when: Accuracy critical, point measurement needed, safety-critical - Leverage infrastructure when: Large-scale deployment, cost-sensitive, retrofit scenario, quick pilot
540.5 Example 1: Wi-Fi Sensing - Detecting Breathing and Gestures
Infrastructure: Standard Wi-Fi router (802.11n/ac/ax)
Sensing Capability: Channel State Information (CSI) captures how Wi-Fi signals propagate through space. Human movement, breathing, even heartbeat disturbs these signals.
What It Measures: - Presence detection: Device count, room occupancy (+/-1 person accuracy) - Gesture recognition: Hand waves, swipes (85-95% accuracy) - Breathing rate: Chest movement modulates signal (+/-2 breaths/min) - Fall detection: Sudden signal disruption pattern
Real Deployment: - University dorms: Detect occupancy without cameras (privacy-preserving) - Elderly care: Fall detection without wearables - Smart homes: Gesture control of lights and appliances
540.6 Example 2: Non-Intrusive Load Monitoring (NILM)
Infrastructure: Smart electricity meter (already installed for billing)
Sensing Capability: Analyze current and voltage waveforms to identify unique “signatures” of individual appliances.
What It Measures: - Appliance state: On/off, standby, active - Energy breakdown: Per-appliance consumption - Usage patterns: When devices are used
How It Works:
Total home power = 150W (baseline)
-> 1650W (1500W spike = hair dryer turns on)
-> 1750W (100W added = refrigerator compressor)
-> 250W (1500W drop = hair dryer off)
Each appliance has unique electrical signatures: - Resistive loads (heaters, toasters): Clean on/off transitions - Motors (refrigerators, fans): Inrush current spike, steady-state hum - Switched-mode power supplies (computers, chargers): High-frequency harmonics
540.7 Example 3: Cellular Signal Analysis
Infrastructure: Cell towers (already everywhere)
Sensing Capability: Analyze signal strength patterns and handoff events to infer crowd density and movement.
What It Measures: - Crowd density: Number of active devices in area - Traffic flow: Movement patterns between cell zones - Event detection: Large gatherings, unusual patterns
540.8 The Three-Layer Model
- Infrastructure Layer: Existing devices emitting signals (Wi-Fi, power, cellular)
- Disturbance Layer: Environment modulates these signals (human movement, appliance usage)
- Analytics Layer: Software extracts sensing information from signal perturbations
540.9 Design Guidelines
Good candidates for infrastructure sensing: - Large buildings (retrofit without new wiring) - Privacy-sensitive environments (no cameras needed) - Budget-constrained projects - Quick proof-of-concept deployments - Aggregate measurements (counts, not identity)
Still need dedicated sensors for: - Safety-critical applications (fire, gas) - High-precision measurements (temperature +/-0.1C) - Point-specific data (this exact location) - Real-time response (<100ms) - Regulatory compliance (certified sensors)
540.10 Summary
Key infrastructure-leveraging takeaways:
- Existing infrastructure can serve as sensors - Wi-Fi, power, cellular
- Software deployment vs hardware installation - Faster, cheaper
- Area-wide vs point measurements - Different tradeoffs
- Privacy-preserving options - No cameras needed for presence detection
- Combine approaches - Infrastructure + dedicated sensors for best results
540.11 What’s Next
Now that you understand infrastructure sensing:
- To calibrate sensors: Calibration Techniques - Make sensors accurate
- To read datasheets: Reading Datasheets - Decode specifications
- To see common sensors: Common IoT Sensors - Popular sensors