Publication | Closed Access
Low-cost lightweight airborne laser-based sensors for pipeline leak detection and reporting
19
Citations
3
References
2013
Year
EngineeringPipeline SurveillanceSensorsAerospace EngineeringHazardous Gas PlumeSpectroscopyLaser SpectroscopyInfrared SensorRemote SensingCommercial Laser-based MethaneLaser-based SensorInstrumentationLeakage DetectionUnmanned Aerial SystemsHigh-power LasersOptical SensorsPipeline Leak Detection
Laser sensing enables aerial detection of natural gas pipeline leaks without need to fly through a hazardous gas plume. This paper describes adaptations of commercial laser-based methane sensing technology that provide relatively low-cost lightweight and battery-powered aerial leak sensors. The underlying technology is near-infrared Standoff Tunable Diode Laser Absorption Spectroscopy (sTDLAS). In one configuration, currently in commercial operation for pipeline surveillance, sTDLAS is combined with automated data reduction, alerting, navigation, and video imagery, integrated into a single-engine single-pilot light fixed-wing aircraft or helicopter platform. In a novel configuration for mapping landfill methane emissions, a miniaturized ultra-lightweight sTDLAS sensor flies aboard a small quad-rotor unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV).
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1