4.7 Article

Blockage detection in pressurized water-filled pipe using high frequency acoustic waves

Journal

MECHANICAL SYSTEMS AND SIGNAL PROCESSING
Volume 185, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymssp.2022.109817

Keywords

High frequency acoustic waves; Pipe system; Wave-blockage interaction; Inverse scattering; Blockage detection

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This paper presents a method for detecting small blockages in water supply lines using wave scattering principle and Maximum Likelihood Estimation technique. The method allows the early detection of blockages with high accuracy and robustness.
This paper presents a method for detecting small blockages (i.e., blockages whose radial length scale LR is significantly smaller than the pipe diameter D) in water supply lines. A blockage that develops in the inside wall of a pressurised pipe makes its presence felt to transient waves through drag and inertial forces. The blockage-induced wave scattering by the drag force becomes negligible in comparison to that of the inertial force when LR/D MUCH LESS-THAN 1. This paper shows theo-retically and experimentally that the detectability of small blockages is made possible by oper-ating in the regime where the Helmholtz number (ratio of blockage longitudinal length scale LL to probing wavelength lambda) is of order 1 or larger. In particular, wave scattering by a blockage with length scales LR and LL is obtained by solving the system of governing equations (multi -dimen-sional wave equation for the fluid and general impedance equation for the pipe wall) using the Neumann series. An efficient robust high resolution technique for detecting small blockages is developed on the basis of Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE). The proposed method, which requires a single measurement point only, is tested successfully through both numerical and laboratory experiments. The method is shown to be robust against noise where the error in blockage dimension estimation is of the order of 1% even for signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) as low as-5 dB. The proposed methodology allows the detection of blockages at an early enough stage of their development and provides the opportunity to deal with these defects so as to prevent their growth into severe operational problems and notable damages.

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