Researchers found the mechanism of signal amplitude distortion governing the accuracy of pipeline leakage localization

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The instrumentation system has improved enormously since the first leak noise correlator was employed. It is currently in common use for the inspection of pipeline networks, in particular, for the leakage location in buried water pipes. In order to improve the sustainability of pipeline networks, new leak detection technology and equipment have received much attention in the past two decades.

As suggested by most manufacturers of commercial correlators, the sensing performance of leak noise is one of the key factors for accurate location of pipeline leakage. In order to reveal the mechanism of signal amplitude distortion governing the accuracy of pipeline leakage localization, researcher from the Institute of Acoustics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (IACAS) along with researchers from UNESP conducted the theoretical, numerical and experimental investigations of the effects of severe amplitude distortion through either clipping or quantization on the accuracy of the leak location.

The research was published online in Journal of Sound and Vibration on 17 August, 2019.

Researchers previously proposed the model of the internal pressure and pipe wall vibration resulting from water leakage in buried pipes. On this basis, they introduced the SIFNUM function to simulate the extreme cases (clipping or quantization), effectively keeping only the zero crossings in the signals, as shown in Figure 1. Combined with Van Vleck model and random telegraph theory for severely clipped signals, analytical expressions along with their approximations were derived for the cross-correlation function (CCF) and cross power spectral density (CPSD) for both pressure and acceleration measurements, which facilitated insights into the effects of signal amplitude distortion on the efficacy using cross-correlation.

It was demonstrated that even if the signals suffered from severe amplitude distortion, an accurate time delay estimate and hence leak location could be obtained provided that the zero crossings in the noise data were preserved. For experimental data from actual leak detection measurements as plotted in Figure 2, the clipping effect on the shape of the cross-correlation coefficients (close to the peak values) was negligible for both pressure and acceleration measurements.

The findings had a major implication for the development of leak noise correlators, which included that: electronic circuits for automatic gain control were unnecessary; the fidelity of the digitised signals using a large number of bits in the ADC was unnecessary; if the leak noise was at least as large as the voltage level of a single bit, the time delay estimation using two leak noise signals was possible.

This work was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (under Grant 11774378), FAPESP and SABESP. 

Figure. 1 An actual leak noise signal and the corresponding clipped signalImage by IOA

Figure. 2 Processed cross-spectral density, phase spectrum and cross-correlation coefficients for measured leak noise signals and the clipped signalsImage by IOA

 

Reference:

M. J. Brennan, GAO Yan, P. C. Ayala, F. C. L. Almeida, P. F. Joseph, A. T. Paschoalini, Amplitude Distortion of Measured Leak Noise Signals caused by Instrumentation: Effects on Leak Detection in Water Pipes using the Cross-Correlation Method, Journal of Sound and Vibration (2019). DOI: 10.1016/j.jsv.2019.114905

Contact:

ZHOU Wenjia

Institute of Acoustics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 100190 Beijing, China

E-mail: media@mail.ioa.ac.cn

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