| Literature DB >> 35898022 |
Qi Liu1, Bin Zhou1, Jianyong Zhang2, Ruixue Cheng2, Xuhao Zhao1, Rong Zhao1, Minglu Dai1, Bubin Wang1, Yihong Wang1.
Abstract
Accurate ranging and real-time temperature monitoring are essential for metrology and safety in electrical conduit applications. This paper proposes an acoustic time-of-flight (TOF) estimation method based on the digital lock-in filtering (DLF) technique for conduit ranging and thermometry. The method establishes the relationship between the frequency and the time domain by applying a linear frequency modulated Chirp signal as the sound source and using the DLF technique to extract the first harmonic of the characteristic frequencies of the transmitted and received signals. Acoustic TOF estimation in the conduit is then achieved by calculating the mathematical expectation of the time difference between each characteristic frequency in the time-frequency relationship of the two signals. The experimental results with enhanced noise interference on different conduit lengths and various temperature conditions, proved that the proposed DLF method can establish a robust linear time-frequency relationship according to the characteristics of the Chirp signal, and the measurement accuracy of TOF has also been confirmed. Compared to the conventional method, the DLF method provides the lowest absolute error and standard deviation for both distance and temperature measurements with an enhanced robustness.Entities:
Keywords: acoustic ranging; acoustic thermometry; digital lock-in filtering; electrical conduit; time-of-flight estimation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35898022 PMCID: PMC9330125 DOI: 10.3390/s22155519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.847
Figure 1Schematic of the acoustic ranging and thermometry method for electric conduits.
Figure 2The source signal and its instantaneous frequency.
Figure 3Flow chart of the DLF method for establishing time-frequency relationships.
Figure 4Example of TOF estimation process with DLF method. (a) The time-domain waveform of the received signal and time-frequency relationships of transmitted and received signals. (b) The acoustic spectrogram of the received signal. (c) Normalized first harmonic shown at 0.5 kHz intervals within the signal bandwidth from the starting frequency.
Figure 5Schematic of the measurement experiment platform.
Figure 6Signal waveform and acoustic spectrum at conduit length of 7 m. (a) Transmitted and received acoustic signal waveforms for a conduit length of 7 m. (b) Acoustic spectrum of the transmitted signal. (c) Acoustic spectrum of the received signal.
Figure 7The time-frequency relationships of different lengths of conduits are extracted by the DLF method.
Figure 8RE and SD results for acoustic methods at different conduit lengths.
Figure 9Temperature measurement results in different SNR conditions.
Figure 10Temperature results of the four methods in different temperature conditions.