DocumentCode :
1578587
Title :
Ultrasonic technologies for advanced process monitoring, measurement, and control
Author :
Bond, L.J. ; Morra, M. ; Greenwood, M.S. ; Bamberger, J.A. ; Pappas, R.A.
Author_Institution :
Pacific Northwest Nat. Lab., Richland, WA, USA
Volume :
2
fYear :
2003
Firstpage :
1288
Abstract :
Ultrasonic signals are well suited for characterizing of liquids, slurries, and multiphase flows. Ultrasound sensor systems provide real-time insitu measurements or visualizations, and the sensing systems are compact, rugged, and relatively inexpensive. The objective is to develop ultrasonic sensors that 1) can be attached permanently to a pipeline wall, possibly as a spool piece inserted into the line, and 2) can clamp onto an existing pipeline wall and be movable to another location. Two examples of systems based on pulse-echo and transmission signal analysis are used to illustrate some of the capabilities of ultrasonic online measurements with technologies that have applications in the nuclear, petrochemical, and food processing industries.
Keywords :
multiphase flow; process control; process monitoring; slurries; ultrasonic measurement; ultrasonic transducers; multiphase flow; pipeline wall; process control; process measurement; process monitoring; pulse-echo signal analysis; spool piece; transmission signal analysis; ultrasonic online measurement; ultrasonic sensor; ultrasonic signal; ultrasonic technology; ultrasound sensor system; Liquids; Monitoring; Pipelines; Pulse measurements; Real time systems; Sensor systems; Slurries; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic variables measurement; Visualization;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Instrumentation and Measurement Technology Conference, 2003. IMTC '03. Proceedings of the 20th IEEE
ISSN :
1091-5281
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7705-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IMTC.2003.1207959
Filename :
1207959
Link To Document :
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