科技报告详细信息
ACOUSTIC DETECTING AND LOCATING GAS PIPE LINE INFRINGEMENT
Loth, John L ; Morris, Gary J. ; Palmer, George M. ; Guiler, Richard ; Mehra, Deepak
West Virginia University (United States)
关键词: Amplification;    Natural Gas;    Power Transmission Lines;    Monitoring;    Signal-To-Noise Ratio;   
DOI  :  10.2172/822767
RP-ID  :  NONE
RP-ID  :  FC26-02NT41324
RP-ID  :  822767
美国|英语
来源: UNT Digital Library
PDF
【 摘 要 】

The West Virginia University natural gas transmission line leak detection research is only considering using readily available 1/2 inch pipeline access ports for the detection of leak generated signals. The main problem with leak signals is the low signal to noise ratio. One of the acoustic signals associated with gas escaping through a leak is only temporary and is in the form of a rarefaction wave originating when the leak is formed. Due to pipeline friction, over distance such a step function transitions to a ramp function. The ability to identify a leak by pipeline monitoring and signal processing depends a great deal on the quality and signal to noise ratio of the characteristics of the detectors used. Combinations of sensing devices are being used for the WVU sensor package and are contained in a removable sensor housing. The four sensors currently installed are a 1/2 inch 3 Hz-40 Khz microphone, an audible range moving coil sensor, a piezo-electric pressure transducer, and the WVU designed floating 3 inch diameter diaphragm to detect flow transient induced pressure ramp type signals. The WVU diaphragm sensor, which is currently under development, uses the same diaphragm principle as a high quality capacitance type microphone, but utilizes aerodynamic signal amplification. This type of amplification only amplifies the ramp-signal itself, not the random pipeline noise.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
822767.pdf 1235KB PDF download
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:22次 浏览次数:19次