Paper
3 April 2012 Ultrasonic monitoring of a pipe under operating conditions
Chang Liu, Joel Harley, Nicholas O'Donoughue, Yujie Ying, Martin H. Altschul, James H. Garrett Jr., José M. F. Moura, Irving J. Oppenheim, Lucio Soibelman
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The paper presents experimental results of applying an ultrasonic monitoring system to a real-world operating hot-water supply system. The purpose of these experiments is to investigate the feasibility of continuous ultrasonic damage detection on pipes with permanently mounted piezoelectric transducers under environmental and operational variations. Ultrasonic guided wave is shown to be an efficient damage detector in laboratory experiments. However, environmental and operational variations produce dramatic changes in those signals, and therefore a useful signal processing approach must distinguish change caused by a scatterer from change caused by ongoing variations. We study pressurized pipe segments (10-in diameter) in a working hot-water supply system that experiences ongoing variations in pressure, temperature, and flow rate; the system is located in an environment that is mechanically and electrically noisy. We conduct pitch-catch tests, with a duration of 10 ms, between transducers located roughly 12 diameters apart. We applied different signal processing techniques to the collected data in order to investigate the ongoing environmental and operational variations and the stationarity of the signal. We present our analysis of these signals and preliminary detection results.
© (2012) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Chang Liu, Joel Harley, Nicholas O'Donoughue, Yujie Ying, Martin H. Altschul, James H. Garrett Jr., José M. F. Moura, Irving J. Oppenheim, and Lucio Soibelman "Ultrasonic monitoring of a pipe under operating conditions", Proc. SPIE 8345, Sensors and Smart Structures Technologies for Civil, Mechanical, and Aerospace Systems 2012, 83450B (3 April 2012); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.915040
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Cited by 13 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Ultrasonics

Signal detection

Transducers

Environmental sensing

Ferroelectric materials

Received signal strength

Signal processing

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