This is a joint project with Professor Richard Challis at Nottingham University. The aim of the project is to use measurements of waves which propagate in the walls of pipes in order to determine information about the contents of the pipes.  To take a simple example, a viscous fluid within a pipe exerts a drag on a wave travelling in the wall of the pipe, so causing attenuation of that wave.  Measurements of a range of other properties of the fluid are possible by exploitation of detailed analysis of the multiple modes in the pipe wall, in combination with complex fluid models for the contents.  As well as generic investigations, the idea is being applied to two specific industrial tasks: (a) the in-line measurement of the properties of foods and chemicals in-process, and (b) the detection of sludging and blockages in chemical process pipelines.

On-line measurement of the contents of pipelines using guided ultrasonic waves

References

J Ma, F Simonetti, M Lowe, "Scattering of the fundamental torsional mode by an axisymmetric layer inside a pipe", J.Acoust. Soc. Am., vol. 120, pp. 1871-1880, 2006.

J Ma, M Lowe, F Simonetti, "Measurement of the properties of fluids inside pipes using guided longitudinal waves", IEEE Trans Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control, vol. 54, 647-658, 2007.

J Ma, MJS Lowe, F Simonetti, "Feasibility study of sludge and blockage detection inside pipes using guided torsional waves", Meas Sci Technol, vol. 18, 2629-2641, 2007.