The ORFEUS Project: a step change in Ground Penetrating Radar technology to locate buried utilities
Oct 30, 2008
There is a serious issue associated with the inability to detect and accurately locate buried utility assets and, as a result, too many holes are dug in the road. This creates problems such as traffic delays, leading to unnecessary fuel usage, and quality of life issues related to air quality, noise pollution and lost time. This is not a single utility problem and needs to be addressed on a European basis, with utilities working together to provide appropriate solutions. ORFEUS is a European Commission funded Specific Targeted Research Project (STREP) recently begun with the aim of developing the next generation of ground penetrating radar (GPR) systems. They will raise the probability of detection of underground buried assets and, as a result, significantly ease their rehabilitation and/or replacement. The project will last for 36 months and will cost €5 million.
- To provide a step change in the depth penetration and spatial resolution of GPR used for surveys carried out from the ground surface.
- To design a prototype innovative GPR-based real-time obstacle detection system for steerable bore-heads of Horizontal Directional Drilling (HDD) pipe and cable laying systems, so that they can operate more safely below ground.
- To increase knowledge of the electrical behaviour of the ground, by means of in-situ measurements to enhance understanding of the sub-soil electrical environment, and to provide information for scientifically based antenna design.
The consortium running the project comprises representatives of the major water and gas utilities across Europe, one of the world’s leading developer of GPR systems, designers and operators of one of the world’s leading Horizontal Directional Drilling (HDD) companies and leading European academics, all supported by a recognized authority in GPR technology and its applications.
- ice thickness measurement;
- fresh water depth measurement;
- salt deposit thickness;
- desert sand layer investigations;
- buried plant location;
with the emphasis usually being on deep penetration, sometimes up to a few kilometres. As a rule, deep penetration requires emissions at frequencies of a few MHz or tens of MHz, with the consequent need for large antennas and the accompanying restriction of low resolution of the objects or interfaces detected. Shallow objects lying in, say, the first one or two metres of the earth’s surface, which include those of most interest to utilities, may be detected by emissions at higher frequencies, up to 1000 MHz, for example. Systems typically intended to penetrate a few metres into the ground have become known by the term Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR).
Surprisingly, the latest developments in GPR are oriented towards visualisation improvement, such as 3-dimensional plots, and GPS positioning, with no attention paid to addressing the basic radar signal detection problem, which can be extremely challenging. Clearly, such developments will not increase system sensitivity but will merely improve the aesthetics of the display. If the received signal is too weak, as would be the case in wet, muddy ground, enhanced graphic software will solve neither the basic signal problem nor the detection performance.
For this reason, ORFEUS seeks to introduce Stepped Frequency Continuous Wave (SFCW) technology into GPR systems as an alternative to the present approach. In theory, stepped frequency microwave sources possess superior dynamic range and stability compared to pulse systems, and permit the control of the frequency range, thus allowing an improvement in the penetration performance.
Although the available peak power of the SFCW radar is some 20 dB lower than that of the impulse system, the receiver noise is greatly reduced due to the extremely narrow band filter used for receiving the tones, thus ensuring a large increase in dynamic range.
However, the potential advantages of the SFCW transmit and receive system, in terms of superior dynamic range, have not been realised yet; this is because of some technical limitations (e.g. the slow repetition rate of the frequency generator) and related implementation costs.
Moreover, additional measures are necessary to suppress internal reflections and match the antenna to the ground characteristics in order to optimise the propagation of the radar signal into the ground.
The bore-head radar will have the capability to look in the forward and sideways directions and to detect objects which come within the cones of the antenna radiation patterns. Information from the radar will be passed to the operator on the surface so that he may steer around and thus avoid objects that would otherwise have been struck.
In ORFEUS a predictive model will be developed to provide the optimisation routine for adaptation of ground coupled antenna performance. Only then can the antenna impedance be adapted to improve the performance so vital for increasing penetration depth and high resolution at larger depths.
Moreover, by combining electromagnetic characterisation, at GPR frequencies, with geo-technical investigations and supplementing them with regional geological settings history information, it should be possible to obtain a reliable characterisation of the ground. This will provide an indispensable service for geotechnical applications of surface GPR as well as bore-head GPR in HDD technologies. The successful combination of these complementary sources of information will lead to the necessary knowledge for developing and building a GPR applicability map of Europe.
Moreover, a programme of measurements to establish the range of soils electrical parameters over which the GPR’s will operate will underpin the scientific development work of the project.
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