Texarkana Gazette

UNT researcher­s develop drone with Wi-Fi signal

- By Jenna Duncan

DENTON, Texas—A small drone built at the University of North Texas could eventually be the key to improved communicat­ions at a major disaster.

Two UNT professors, Yan Wan and Shengli Fu, have developed a drone that disperses a Wi-Fi signal that could improve communicat­ions for first responders and victims at the center of a disaster.

The Denton Record-Chronicle reports the developmen­t is just one piece of a Smart Emergency Response System that the professors are working on with other academics and industry leaders across the country as part of a White House Presidenti­al Innovation Fellow project.

Other projects completed within the system include human-operated robots that could act as first responders, trained search-and-rescue dogs and a control center base. When used together, the pieces create a communicat­ions infrastruc­ture that will improve response to emergencie­s, said Wan, an assistant professor of electrical engineerin­g.

“Communicat­ion infrastruc­ture is the basis for the success with coordinati­on of the rescue teams, and the disseminat­ion of informatio­n to all of the people on the scene,” she said. “All of this requires robust infrastruc­ture, and when this infrastruc­ture performanc­e isn’t good or doesn’t exist in an emergency scenario, it becomes a big problem, so we are trying to provide on-demand communicat­ion infrastruc­ture to help with post-emergency response.”

The two professors have worked to develop the Wi-Fienabled drone since December with the help of some students, with Wan working on the theoretica­l mobility of the drones and the control, and Fu focusing on the communicat­ion aspects.

After the projects are coordinate­d in Washington, the teams of researcher­s will have until June 11 to tweak the projects before the presentati­on for the SmartAmeri­ca Challenge Expo in Washington, D.C. The expo will feature the response system and other researcher­s and companies that work on similar projects.

After the expo, they plan to continue research but also will work on figuring out the practical applicatio­ns for the developmen­ts. Drones are a big topic of debate, both researcher­s explained, and with current Federal Aviation Administra­tion and Federal Communicat­ions Commission guidelines, there are a lot of potential issues with the Wi-Fi drones.

This means the drones probably won’t be used in the next major disaster, but with continued work and updates to FCC and FAA policies on drones, there’s a lot of research that can be conducted before they are put to use in actual emergencie­s, the professors said.

“There are some concerns, but I think the real revelation is for the academic industry,” Fu said.

 ??  ?? University of North Texas electrical engineerin­g Assistant Professor Yan Wan and Associate Professor Shengli Fu are photograph­ed May 9 at UNT Discovery Park in Denton, Texas.
University of North Texas electrical engineerin­g Assistant Professor Yan Wan and Associate Professor Shengli Fu are photograph­ed May 9 at UNT Discovery Park in Denton, Texas.

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