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Reliable Leak Detection in Pipelines Using Integrated DdTS Temperature and DAS Acoustic Fiber-Optic Sensor | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

Reliable Leak Detection in Pipelines Using Integrated DdTS Temperature and DAS Acoustic Fiber-Optic Sensor


Abstract:

Reliable and early detection of leaks in pipelines transporting liquid or gas is highly desirable. In this work, two orthogonal technologies based on high-sensitivity fib...Show More

Abstract:

Reliable and early detection of leaks in pipelines transporting liquid or gas is highly desirable. In this work, two orthogonal technologies based on high-sensitivity fiber-optic distributed sensing were integrated into one system and tested for their effectiveness in actual field installations. The first technology is based on temperature difference detection using Distributed Differential Temperature Sensor (DdTS or DDTS). The second is based on Distributed Acoustic Sensor (DAS), which uses Coherent Optical Time-Domain Reflectometry (C-OTDR). DdTS can almost instantaneously detect a temperature difference in the optical fiber as low as 0.0005 °C, while C-OTDR can detect minute wide-bandwidth acoustic signals. Both technologies can detect the location of a leak to within a few meters. Experimental results for water and nitrogen gas leaks detected by the integrated system are presented for two different installations in the field - one where the cable was buried directly in the soil and another where the cable was buried in soil inside a 2” conduit for about 29 km. DdTS reliably detected leaks at both installations, while DAS detected leaks only when the cable was buried directly in soil. Test results show that the integration of both DdTS and DAS technologies can increase the probability of leak detection and minimize false/nuisance alarms. The integrated system also detected third party interference (TPI), thus providing a one-system solution for pipeline integrity monitoring and intrusion detection up to 40 km from a central location.
Date of Conference: 22-25 October 2018
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 23 December 2018
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Conference Location: Montreal, QC, Canada

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