Authors
Cornelia Inauen, Jonathan Edward Chambers, Paul Bryan Wilkinson, Philip Meldrum, Russell T Swift, Sebastian Uhlemann, David Gunn, Ben Dashwood, Julien Taxil, Giulio Curioni
Publication date
2016/12
Journal
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
Volume
2016
Pages
NS41B-1904
Description
Locating and delineating leakage from subsurface pipelines is an important task for civil engineers. 4D Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT) allows changes in subsurface resistivity to be imaged at a high spatial and temporal resolution in a minimally invasive manner. It is therefore a promising tool to supplement conventional point-sensing techniques to monitor subsurface flow processes. To assess the efficacy of ERT for pipe leakage monitoring several controlled leak experiments were carried out at a test site in Blagdon, Bristol, UK. To simulate the leak, a plastic pipe with a hole was buried below a flat, grassed area at a depth of 0.7 m, representing a standard UK mains water pipe installation. The water table at the site lies well below the surface meaning that the experiment took entirely place in the vadose zone, where changes in resistivity are primarily sensitive to water content variations. The ERT array …
Total citations
20202021202211
Scholar articles
C Inauen, JE Chambers, PB Wilkinson, P Meldrum… - AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts, 2016