New research has seen the development of technology that could prevent buried pipe leaks. This pipeline damage prevention system enables early warning by detecting the timing and location of the damage.
The Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science has developed a damage prevention and early detection system for buried pipelines, preventing pipeline failures caused by third-party interference (TPI) and other threats.
TPI is one of the leading causes of damage to buried pipelines used for transporting water, petroleum, gas, and other substances. Leaks in damaged pipelines lead to environmental contamination and present risks such as explosions, fires, and sinkholes. It remains challenging for pipeline management entities to detect TPI in advance.
The Non-Destructive Metrology Group at KRISS has developed a real-time monitoring system that identifies actual damage activities before buried pipelines are damaged. When TPI or other threats make a critical impact just around pipelines, the system recognizes it as a risk and gives early warnings to prevent incidents.
The core technology is based on precise measurement and analytical models of the elastic wave propagated upon impact to the pipelines. With a pair of sensors several hundred meters apart along the pipeline, the system enables the real-time monitoring of impact signals between the sensors.
This provides immediate calculation of the time and location of the impact, similar to seismological centres that detect vibrations and localize the source position of an earthquake using the arrival time of seismic waves.
Studying how to detect buried pipe leaks
The research team conducted tremendous field experiments to validate the system’s practical applicability to real buried pipelines in operation spanning several kilometres in South Korea.
The results demonstrated that the system successfully detected impacts over about 20 kN with an accuracy of over 95 per cent. Given that the typical force causing pipeline damage is often in the range of several hundred kN or more, the system was found to be suitable for preventing and warning pipeline damage incidents.
Conventional monitoring technologies for buried pipelines usually focus only on detecting leaks after damage occurs. This accomplishment by KRISS, therefore, represents the world’s first early detection system for long-distance pipeline damage. The research team completed technology transfers to companies in South Korea and filed patent applications in the United States and Europe.
The novel system can be applied to water pipelines and various types of pipelines, including those for oil and gas transportation and heat supply. It can be utilized in intelligent monitoring systems to detect and manage abnormal conditions in buried pipelines online.
Dr Dong-Jin Yoon, a principal researcher from the Non-Destructive Metrology Group, said, “Despite the serious risk of major accidents and loss of life due to pipeline breaks, we have had to rely on leakage reports from informants. This technology will contribute to public safety and social cost savings.”
The study is published in the journal Structural Health Monitoring.