Title: Development of hydrocarbon vapor imaging
1Development of hydrocarbon vapor imaging systems
for petroleum and natural gas fugitive emission
sensing
Thomas J. Kulp, Karla Armstrong, Ricky
Sommers, Uta-Barbara Goers, and Dahv
Kliner Sandia National Laboratories Livermore, CA
94551-0969 tjkulp_at_sandia.gov
2Imaging lidar is a powerful tool for gas leak
detection
- A laser illuminates the scene as it is
- imaged in the infrared
- Gases are visualized when they absorb
- the backscattered radiation
- Conventional leak detection is carried out
- using handheld sensors
- Imaging allows rapid broad area coverage
- and easy recognition of plume presence
- and source location
Solid surface
Laser radiation tuned to gas absorption
Gas plume
3Gas imaging offers to accelerate leak
surveillance, thus decreasing the cost of
environmental compliance
- Typical refinery spends 1M
- per year for leak detection and
- repair (LDAR)
- Currently hand-held sniffers
- are used according to EPA
- Method 21
- The technology in this project is
- now being considered as a viable
- alternative to Method 21 by a
- working group of EPA, API, DOE,
- and petroleum industry members
- Acceptance will require approval
- as an alternative work practice
- - laboratory testing
Measured Leak Rate Distribution Data
Smart LDAR concept Rapid surveys focusing on
strong leakers
7 Refineries (all components and
services) Source API Publication 310, November
1997
4Motivation for leak sensing in the US natural gas
industry
Safety issues
800,000-900,000 leaks addressed each year
200-300 leaks result in accidents
5Problem There has been a lack of BAGI
instrumentation that sees hydrocarbons
critical to the gas and oil industries
- Operation near 3.3 µm favored due to
- gas and atmospheric absorption
- Broad (100-200 cm-1) tuning desirable
- to access multiple species
- BAGI instruments commercially available
- at 9-11 µm but not at 3.3 µm
- Basic limitation has been the lack of
- suitable laser sources
6Solution We have developed imagers that use
nonlinear conversion to generate tunable mid-IR
(3-5 µm) light
Scanned imager
CW optical parametric oscillator (OPO)
Pulsed imager
Pulsed DFG-OPA laser
7Nonlinear conversion shifts light from one
wavelength to another
Optical parametric oscillator (OPO)
Optical parametric generation
- Signal (or idler) wave resonated
- Pthr Watts Pout 100s mW - Ws
New microengineered nonlinear crystals improve
efficiency gt smaller and more tunable systems
- Example Periodically-poled
- lithium niobate (PPLN)
- Engineered optical axis inversion
- 15X more gain than ordinary crystal
- Tunable over 1.3 - 4.4 µm
8The first hydrocarbon imager was a pulsed system
Range - 70 m Sensitivity - 36 ppm-m methane
0.02 scf/hr leak rate
Kulp, Powers, Kennedy, and Goers Applied Optics
37 3912-3922 (1998)
9Differential imaging was demonstrated to improve
gas plume visibility for the pulsed imaging system
Powers, Kulp, and Kennedy, Applied Optics 39
1440-1448 (2000)
10Next step in evolution Development of CW systems
- CW systems offer
- Less expensive imager
- (scanner vs array)
- Clear commercialization path
- Upgrade to diodes
- Less susceptible to damage
11A PPLN-based OPO was developed for scanned cw
imaging
NdYAG laser
Generic refinery wavelength
Two periods created 29.3 - 30.1 µm 29.7 -
30.0 µm
Idler tuning range 2820-3150 cm-1
12A van-mounted scanned system employing the PPLN
OPO was field tested at a refinery during April,
1999
Gas plume
- System tested in parallel
- to EPA Method 21
- Imager operated well in
- the field environment
- Results motivated the
- development of a portable
- system
13April 1999 field demonstration
- M21 team independently monitored process areas
first - - Measured 1,464 components, primarily valves and
pump seals - - All components part of existing LDAR program
- Gas Imaging team monitored independently next
- - Observed estimated 6,600 components, all types
- - All visible parts observed, regardless of
whether tagged or not - - Followed-up leak discoveries with vapor
analyzer - - Gas Imaging leak discoveries video-taped
- Both teams tested seven process areas
14Gas imaging found high leakers in three process
areas
- High leakers above 100,000 ppm were identified
by current prototype - Lowest leak independently found was 28,000 ppm
- Some leaks at about 30,000 ppm were missed
- Did not find leaks below 10,000 ppm in the
refinery setting - Lower detection limit currently appears to be
between 25,000 - and 50,000 ppm
Restricted access during test motivated the
development of an operator-portable imaging system
Full results tabulated in a report located on the
EPA Website
15Goal Develop an imaging lidar for leak detection
that can be battery operated and carried by the
system user
Van-mounted and operator-portable raster-scanned
imaging lidars
- Van-mounted imager successfully tested in
natural gas distribution - and petroleum refinery applications. However,
access restrictions - prohibits vehicle use in many cases.
Natural gas leak in Atlanta Ga
16Approach Develop a system based on a compact CW
OPO pumped by a Yb-doped fiber amplifier
Miniature NdYAG seed laser
Fiber Optic Amplifier
Compact SR-OPO
Consolidated scanner (single unit)
- Primary technology competition is diode lasers
which cannot produce - sufficient 3.3 µm power at narrow linewidth and
require cryogenic cooling - Yb-doped fiber amplifiers demonstrated 45
electrical-optical conversion - CW OPO capable of converting 60-90 of pump
output to signal idler - Fiber amplifier inherently rugged
17The Yb-doped fiber amplifier produces high output
power in a compact and efficient format
- Present diode (JDS) requirement - 4V _at_ 3.5 A to
achieve 4W output - No visible SBS with a single-mode seed