The power transmission lines are the link between the power plants and the points of consumption, through substations. Most importantly, the assessment of damaged aerial power lines and rusted conductors is of extreme importance for public safety; hence, power line and associated components must be periodically inspected to ensure a continuous supply and to identify any fault and defect. To achieve these objectives, recently Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) have been widely used: in fact, they provide a safe way to bring sensors close to the power transmission lines and their associated components without halting the equipment during the inspection, and reducing operational cost and risk. In this work, the drone, equipped with multi-modal sensors, captures images in the visible and infrared domain and transmits them to the ground station. We used state-of-the-art computer vision methods to highlight expected faults (i.e. hot spots) or damaged components of the electrical infrastructure (i.e. damaged insulators). Infrared imaging, which is invariant to large scale and illumination changes in the real operating environment, supported the identification of faults in power transmission lines; while a neural network is adapted and trained to detect and classify insulators from an optical video stream. We demonstrate our approach on the data captured by a drone in Parma, Italy.
Fault detection in power equipment via an unmanned aerial system using multi modal data
Jalil B;Leone GR;Martinelli M;Pascali MA;Berton A
2019
Abstract
The power transmission lines are the link between the power plants and the points of consumption, through substations. Most importantly, the assessment of damaged aerial power lines and rusted conductors is of extreme importance for public safety; hence, power line and associated components must be periodically inspected to ensure a continuous supply and to identify any fault and defect. To achieve these objectives, recently Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) have been widely used: in fact, they provide a safe way to bring sensors close to the power transmission lines and their associated components without halting the equipment during the inspection, and reducing operational cost and risk. In this work, the drone, equipped with multi-modal sensors, captures images in the visible and infrared domain and transmits them to the ground station. We used state-of-the-art computer vision methods to highlight expected faults (i.e. hot spots) or damaged components of the electrical infrastructure (i.e. damaged insulators). Infrared imaging, which is invariant to large scale and illumination changes in the real operating environment, supported the identification of faults in power transmission lines; while a neural network is adapted and trained to detect and classify insulators from an optical video stream. We demonstrate our approach on the data captured by a drone in Parma, Italy.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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prod_404156-doc_140786.pdf
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prod_404156-doc_147911.pdf
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Descrizione: Fault detection in power equipment via an unmanned aerial system using multi modal data
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