Identification of feasible flying pattern of drone for victim identification in remote disaster area / Intan Nabina Azmi

Recently, a drone has been widely used for numerous applications. Drones are also beneficial in difficult-to-access areas, especially during disasters. Considering the large scale of the disaster areas that lack network coverage and the limitations of ad hoc networks, an effective flying pattern is...

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Main Author: Azmi, Intan Nabina
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/75368/1/75368.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/75368/
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spelling my.uitm.ir.753682023-03-28T11:08:21Z https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/75368/ Identification of feasible flying pattern of drone for victim identification in remote disaster area / Intan Nabina Azmi Azmi, Intan Nabina Wireless communication systems. Mobile communication systems. Access control Aircraft Recently, a drone has been widely used for numerous applications. Drones are also beneficial in difficult-to-access areas, especially during disasters. Considering the large scale of the disaster areas that lack network coverage and the limitations of ad hoc networks, an effective flying pattern is needed to scan the area and transmit data to the base station effectively. Therefore, this research investigates related works on the flying patterns of drones, the network technology used, and the performance of the Flying Ad hoc Networks (FANETs) in terms of throughput. Through extensive literature, 90% of the research deploys more than one drone with different types of mobility and various covered areas. Practically, a high number of drones during the search and rescue mission will increase the cost. The main objective is to identify the most efficient flying pattern for search and rescue. The analysis was conducted using OMNeT++ simulator version 5.2.1 with Inet 3.6.2 and fieldwork implementation at Pulau Sebang, Malacca. The simulation and real implementation outcome shows the possibility of using a single drone in a search and rescue mission, with a Square flying pattern being the most effective flying pattern. Percentage of Coverage area during the real implementation outperformed the simulation result by 2.04%> with real-time video streaming from drone to the base station without experienced any delays. Initial results from the numerical analysis also show that the camera's specification and the height of the flying drone have a considerable impact on gaining a wider coverage area. In addition, the energy needed to complete the Square flying pattern is lower by 3% compared to the Zigzag flying pattern. Moreover, the 5th Generation Mobile technology has better throughput compared to the 802.11 protocols based on the review. FANETs are also stable regardless of the number of drones' usage. The essential contributions of this research are in identifying the best functional and technical specification in the search and rescue mission that utilise drone. Specifically, the finding significantly contributes to the forensic department of Hospital Kuala Lumpur (HKL) in formulating the guidelines for 48 golden hours victim identification in a remote disaster area. 2022 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/75368/1/75368.pdf Identification of feasible flying pattern of drone for victim identification in remote disaster area / Intan Nabina Azmi. (2022) Masters thesis, thesis, Universiti Teknologi MARA (UiTM).
institution Universiti Teknologi Mara
building Tun Abdul Razak Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Mara
content_source UiTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.uitm.edu.my/
language English
topic Wireless communication systems. Mobile communication systems. Access control
Aircraft
spellingShingle Wireless communication systems. Mobile communication systems. Access control
Aircraft
Azmi, Intan Nabina
Identification of feasible flying pattern of drone for victim identification in remote disaster area / Intan Nabina Azmi
description Recently, a drone has been widely used for numerous applications. Drones are also beneficial in difficult-to-access areas, especially during disasters. Considering the large scale of the disaster areas that lack network coverage and the limitations of ad hoc networks, an effective flying pattern is needed to scan the area and transmit data to the base station effectively. Therefore, this research investigates related works on the flying patterns of drones, the network technology used, and the performance of the Flying Ad hoc Networks (FANETs) in terms of throughput. Through extensive literature, 90% of the research deploys more than one drone with different types of mobility and various covered areas. Practically, a high number of drones during the search and rescue mission will increase the cost. The main objective is to identify the most efficient flying pattern for search and rescue. The analysis was conducted using OMNeT++ simulator version 5.2.1 with Inet 3.6.2 and fieldwork implementation at Pulau Sebang, Malacca. The simulation and real implementation outcome shows the possibility of using a single drone in a search and rescue mission, with a Square flying pattern being the most effective flying pattern. Percentage of Coverage area during the real implementation outperformed the simulation result by 2.04%> with real-time video streaming from drone to the base station without experienced any delays. Initial results from the numerical analysis also show that the camera's specification and the height of the flying drone have a considerable impact on gaining a wider coverage area. In addition, the energy needed to complete the Square flying pattern is lower by 3% compared to the Zigzag flying pattern. Moreover, the 5th Generation Mobile technology has better throughput compared to the 802.11 protocols based on the review. FANETs are also stable regardless of the number of drones' usage. The essential contributions of this research are in identifying the best functional and technical specification in the search and rescue mission that utilise drone. Specifically, the finding significantly contributes to the forensic department of Hospital Kuala Lumpur (HKL) in formulating the guidelines for 48 golden hours victim identification in a remote disaster area.
format Thesis
author Azmi, Intan Nabina
author_facet Azmi, Intan Nabina
author_sort Azmi, Intan Nabina
title Identification of feasible flying pattern of drone for victim identification in remote disaster area / Intan Nabina Azmi
title_short Identification of feasible flying pattern of drone for victim identification in remote disaster area / Intan Nabina Azmi
title_full Identification of feasible flying pattern of drone for victim identification in remote disaster area / Intan Nabina Azmi
title_fullStr Identification of feasible flying pattern of drone for victim identification in remote disaster area / Intan Nabina Azmi
title_full_unstemmed Identification of feasible flying pattern of drone for victim identification in remote disaster area / Intan Nabina Azmi
title_sort identification of feasible flying pattern of drone for victim identification in remote disaster area / intan nabina azmi
publishDate 2022
url https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/75368/1/75368.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/75368/
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score 13.160551