4.5 Article

Reconstruction of a leaking gas cloud from a passive FTIR scanning remote-sensing imaging system

Journal

APPLIED OPTICS
Volume 60, Issue 30, Pages 9396-9403

Publisher

OPTICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1364/AO.439086

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Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2019YFF0303400]
  2. Key Research Program of Frontier Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences [QYZDY-SSW-DQC016]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41941011]

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The method proposed in the paper effectively reconstructs the high-resolution CL image of the leaking gas cloud in Passive FTIR scanning remote-sensing imaging systems, addressing the issue of low resolution. The effectiveness of the proposed method is validated through experiments, demonstrating high accuracy, real-time application, and robustness.
The concentration-path-length product (CL) image of the leaking gas cloud measured by the passive Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) scanning remote-sensing imaging system has a low resolution. Gas cloud diffusion is affected by wind speed and direction, which makes it difficult to trace the source of a leakage. Therefore, we propose a method to reconstruct the CL image of the leaking gas cloud applied to the passive FTIR scanning remote-sensing imaging system. First, bicubic interpolation is employed to upsample the low-resolution CL image of gas clouds. Second, the maximum noise-equivalent concentration-path-length (NECL) product is used as a threshold to segment the high-resolution gas cloud image. Third, image morphology processing and the evaluation criteria of the leaking gas cloud are applied to detect the leaking gas cloud. Finally, the high-resolution CL image of the leaking gas cloud is superimposed onto the background image. The effectiveness of the reconstruction method is proven by the SF6 remote-sensing experiment and simulation. The results show that the proposed method should be effectively implemented to reconstruct the high-resolution CL image of the leaking gas cloud. The reconstructed leaking gas cloud plume, as well as the location of the leakage source, are quite obvious. The reconstruction method has been successfully applied to passive FTIR scanning remote-sensing imaging systems, with high accuracy, in real time, and with robustness. (C) 2021 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement

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