4.7 Article

Microwave Sensing of Elemental Sulfur Deposition in Gas Pipelines

Journal

IEEE SENSORS JOURNAL
Volume 22, Issue 14, Pages 14058-14064

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSEN.2022.3177729

Keywords

Sulfur; Pipelines; Sensors; Antennas; Microstrip antennas; Resonant frequency; Monitoring; Elemental sulfur; sensing antenna; gas pipeline; deposition

Funding

  1. Deanship of Research Oversight and Coordination (DROC) at King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals (KFUPM) [INCS2105]

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A novel electromagnetic-based method is proposed to monitor sulfur deposition in natural gas pipelines. The method exploits the alteration of antenna resonance behavior caused by the deposited sulfur, and can accurately estimate the thickness of the sulfur layer.
A novel electromagnetic-based method is presented for monitoring elemental sulfur deposition within a natural gas-carrying pipeline. The deposited sulfur behaves as a superstrate layer above a sensing microstrip patch antenna that is optimally placed on the inner wall of the gas pipeline. Increasing the superstrate thickness by the sulfur deposition alters the antenna resonance behavior, which can be monitored externally using a vector network analyzer. The effect of uneven or bumpy sulfur deposition is studied. Sensing antennas positioned outside a plexiglass pipeline are also investigated to observe the change in the antenna impedance matching with accumulating sulfur superstrate. A variation in the resonance frequency of the invasive sensing antenna from 10.14 to 8.32 GHz is observed for a deposited sulfur thickness that ranges from 0-7 mm. The sensing sensitivity is found to be 0.23 GHz/mm. Lab-based measured results agreed well with the simulated responses using commercial electromagnetic software. The proposed low-cost and easy-to-implement detection technique accurately estimates the deposited sulfur thickness inside the natural gas-carrying pipelines.

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