Skip to main content

Better traffic management with acoustics? Sounds good, says SequoIA Analytics

French start-up is using roadside fibre-optic cables to provide better traffic data
By David Arminas January 19, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
SequoIA Analytics says system will provide unprecedentedly detailed traffic information (© Tomas1111 | Dreamstime.com)

French start-up SequoIA Analytics plans to use information from roadside fibre-optic cables to measure vibrations that will indicate traffic congestion in near real-time.

SequoIA Analytics is part of the Inria Startup Studio programme hosted by Inria - National Research Institute for Digital Science and Technology. The company says it has successfully used DAS technology – distributed acoustic sensing – in a small test project along the Voie Pierre Mathis bypass around Nice, southern France.

According to a recent report in the French newspaper Nice-Matin, SequoIA Analytics tapped into the roadside fibre-optic cable to gather over two months. Back in the lab, the information was analysed offline.

"This experiment has proven that it works,” said Daniel Mata Flores, project leader with SequoIA Analytics. “We use a recent optical technique, DAS, which makes it possible to transform these cables into thousands of acoustic sensors. We are thus able to measure vibrations produced by road traffic.”

SequoIA Analytics is now in the process of constructing software for a much larger project, he said. The software developed in collaboration with the Nice Côte d'Azur Metropolis should be ready at the end of this year or early 2025.

DAS uses fibre optics to provide distributed strain sensing. In DAS, the optical fibre cable becomes the sensing element. The measurements are made and, in part, processed using an attached opto-electronic device. Such a system allows acoustic frequency strain signals to be detected over large distances and in harsh environments.

The company has said that its innovation could revolutionise road traffic management because it brings an unprecedented level of detailed information to road authorities. It is more precise than existing devices as it can provide measurements every 10m along an axis of up to 100km.

The Nice-Matin report noted that the company will use artificial intelligence algorithms to process the masses of data to determine traffic indicators such as speed, direction and anomalies such as accidents. Flores maintains that, unlike video surveillance cameras installed along arteries, generally spaced every 5-10km, the SequoIA Analytics system will provide unprecedentedly detailed information. 

“This allows us to say every two minutes what is happening along the roads or highways. Two minutes is the time it takes to analyse and provide the indicators,” he said.

Beyond traffic, the technology developed by SequoIA said its technology could be used to ensure rail tracks are not damaged. "Trains vibrate the fibre deployed next to the rails. Railway tracks have natural frequencies and these can change if the track is damaged. In the future, we could monitor the condition of railway tracks, buildings or bridges,” said Flores.

Related Content

  • Huawei develops the next generation of wireless communications
    October 25, 2024
    Huawei has developed and already deployed high-integrity and richly featured cellular communications solutions for the railway sector which are based on the new FRMCS standard and 4-5G technology
  • Connected citizens boosts Boston’s traffic management
    March 30, 2017
    Data-derived traffic management is starting to show benefits as David Crawford discovers. The city of Boston has been facing growing congestion problems in its Seaport regeneration district, with the rate of commercial and residential growth threatening to overtake the capacity of the road network to respond.
  • Vital Technology data comms network deployed at Dublin Port Tunnel
    July 13, 2012
    Vital Technology has supplied a data communications network system to Egis Road & Tunnel Operation Ireland (ERTO) for the Dublin Port Tunnel which opened to traffic in 2007 and is the longest urban tunnel in Europe as well as the largest civil engineering project ever undertaken in Ireland. While core components are proving durable, communication systems became subject to early obsolescence and were causing networking problems and unscheduled closures which prompted the upgrade.
  • Data is driving force behind TomTom's intelligent traffic management
    August 23, 2024
    The complexities of modern urban life have put unprecedented strain on transportation infrastructure. Traffic congestion, accidents, and inefficient resource allocation are persistent challenges. However, as Frans Keijzer, Bid Manager EMEA and APAC at TomTom Enterprise explains, a powerful tool has emerged to reshape the way we manage our roads: big data.