Digital Construction

HS2 tests fibre optic tech to detect ground movement

Sensorgrid fibre optic monitoring being tested (Image: HS2 Ltd)

HS2 and the Align joint venture of Bouygues, Sir Robert McAlpine and Volker Fitzpatrick are testing fibre optic technology to detect minute ground movements in embankments and cuttings, and thus help prevent land slips.

The University of Cambridge’s Centre for Smart Infrastructure & Construction and geosynthetics manufacturer Huesker have created a standard ground-stabilising mesh woven with fibre optic cables, named Sensorgrid. It has been tested At HS2’s Chilterns tunnel south portal site by a team that includes Align’s designer, Jacobs, and infrastructure monitoring company, Epsimon, Together, they created a test pit at the site to trial the technology by simulating ground movement.  

Heavy-duty water-filled bags were laid in the base of the pit and sections of Sensorgrid laid over it and then buried. Monitoring equipment then generated pulses of light that travelled through the fibre optic cable. To simulate ground movement, water was released from the bags, causing the weight of the ground above to move and strain the mesh, which in turn causes a change in characteristics of the light pulsing through it.

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