Deutsch

The ECSTATIC fiber optic project worth 5.1 million euros aims to prevent bridge collapse

67
2025-08-18 10:25:32
Übersetzung anzeigen

A new European research project is exploring whether the same fibre-optic cables that carry our internet could also serve as real-time sensors for hidden damage in infrastructure, including bridges, railways, tunnels and energy pipelines.

 


The €5.1 million ECSTATIC project, coordinated by Aston University in the UK, is trialling this breakthrough approach in a major UK city, using a heavily-used railway viaduct as its first live test site. The goal is to detect subtle structural shifts, stress, and vibrations in real time, using laser light pulses sent through fibre-optic cables already embedded right beneath our feet.

“Our aim is to create a global nervous system for critical infrastructure,” said Prof. David Webb, ECSTATIC project coordinator. “We are hoping to turn existing fiber-optic cables into a 24/7 early-warning system, detecting the tiniest tremors or stress fractures before they become catastrophic. If successful, it will be the difference between fixing a fault and cleaning up a tragedy.”

Light listens

Installing physical sensors across entire transport and energy networks would cost billions and cause major disruption. But the ECSTATIC project is taking a different route: it uses the infrastructure that’s already in place.

At the project’s first demonstration site (a major 19th-century rail viaduct carrying tens of thousands of trains per year), researchers will send ultra-precise laser pulses through buried fiber-optic cables. As trains pass overhead, the fibers subtly flex and vibrate. These movements change how the light behaves inside the cable, altering the phase and polarisation of the light, creating an optical fingerprint of the forces acting on the structure.

By measuring these changes and interpreting them using a new dual-microcomb photonic chip and AI signal processing, ECSTATIC aims to pinpoint early warning signs of damage or fatigue. Significantly, it works without interrupting internet traffic and without laying a single new cable.

“Cracks in bridges, viaducts, or tunnels don’t announce themselves; structures wear down gradually and silently, with the first signs of failure remaining invisible until it’s too late,” added Prof. Webb. “The UK and many places across Europe have hundreds of ageing railway bridges, with millions of vehicles passing under or over them each year. Many of the UK bridges date back to Victorian times, which could present a ticking time-bomb unless we take decisive steps to monitor them now.”

Preventing disasters

The need for early-warning systems is clear from recent bridge collapses in Europe that have cost lives and paralysed cities. In Italy, the Genoa Morandi Bridge disaster in 2018 killed 43 people when a 200-meter section of highway collapsed, despite internal warnings about structural risk years earlier. As recently as last year in Germany, the Carolabrücke in Dresden – a vital lifeline for the city – partially collapsed without warning. The incident severed critical utility lines, leaving parts of the city without hot water for several hours and triggering widespread transport disruption.

These events, though rare, reveal how vulnerable infrastructure can become when ageing structures are left unchecked, and how devastating the consequences can be. ECSTATIC aims to help authorities act before warning signs become disasters, by giving them better data, earlier, and without the need to install costly or disruptive new sensor systems.

With more than five billion kilometers of optical fiber installed across the globe, the potential for ECSTATIC’s technology is enormous, say its partners. If the trials in the UK prove successful, the approach could be rolled out across Europe’s transport and energy networks, enabling safer, smarter infrastructure monitoring at a fraction of the cost of traditional systems.

The project runs until July 2028. It brings together 13 partners from across Europe, including universities in Padova, L’Aquila, Chalmers, Alcalá, and West Attica, alongside industry groups Telecom Italia Sparkle, OTE Group, Nokia, Network Rail, MODUS, and Swiss SME Enlightra SARL, as well as the Greek seismology specialists NOA.

Dates for Photonics Partnership Annual Meeting 2026 announced
Photonics21, the European photonics industry platform, has announced that the Photonics Partnership Annual Meeting 2026 will take place will at the DoubleTree by Hilton Brussels City hotel on 9 & 10 June 2025. Next year’s event will focus on photonics in the next EU Framework Programme and will present the new Photonics Strategic Research and Innovation Agenda (2026) to the European Commission.

Photonics21 invites the industry in Europe to “take the opportunity to get the latest updates on the next EU Framework Programme and to network with your peers from the European photonics community.” The draft event programme as well as the link to the online registration and any further information will be published on the photonics21 website within the next months.

Source: optics.org

Ähnliche Empfehlungen
  • Optimizing the phase focusing of laser accelerators

    With the help of on-chip accelerator technology, researchers at Stanford University are getting closer to manufacturing a miniature electron accelerator that can have various applications in industrial, medical, and physical research.Scientists have proven that silicon dielectric laser accelerators can now be used to accelerate and limit electrons, thereby producing concentrated high-energy electr...

    2024-02-29
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • Brother launches a series of color LED laser printers for homes and offices

    Brother is an innovative global company that proudly launches its latest series of color LED laser printers. The new printer series is colorful and seamlessly connected, designed specifically for home and small office environments.The company's latest product aims to improve productivity in home and small business environments, combining excellent printing quality with excellent printing speed. Ea...

    2024-03-20
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • Using a new type of ground laser to track space debris

    The Polish Space Research Center of the Celestial Geodynamics Observatory located in Borowitz near Poznan will enhance its capabilities with a new and powerful laser.The first task of this state-of-the-art device is to enable researchers to accurately track the trajectories of 300 previously identified space debris in no less than six months.Observatory Director Pawe ł Lejba emphasized the i...

    2024-03-14
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • Halo Industries raises 580 million yuan to achieve significant breakthrough in SiC laser processing field

    Recently, Halo Industries, an innovative technology company based in California, announced that it has successfully raised $80 million in Series B venture capital, marking a significant breakthrough in its use of laser technology to revolutionize the production of silicon carbide (SiC) semiconductor wafer substrates.This financing is led by the US Innovation Technology Fund (USIT) and involves hea...

    2024-07-18
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • LASER CHINA 2025 on-the-Spot, What New Technologies are Trending This Year?

    Every year, Shanghai is lit up with a “feast of light”, that is LASER World of PHOTONICS CHINA, which has lasted for 20 years and become an arena for global photoelectric enterprises to display and compete, instead of just an exhibition hall of devices. Chanelink team visited all these halls for laser technology, thoroughly learning the cutting-edge trends in photoelectric industry.As a technical...

    03-19
    Übersetzung anzeigen