Subspace-Constrained Continuous Methane Leak Monitoring and Optimal Sensor Placement
Kashif Rashid, Lukasz Zielinski, Junyi Yuan, Andrew Speck

TL;DR
This paper introduces a method for quick detection and localization of methane leaks using optimally placed low-cost sensors, considering site constraints and wind variability, to enable rapid response and reduce emissions.
Contribution
It develops a novel approach for optimal sensor placement and leak inversion considering subspace constraints and wind uncertainty in methane leak monitoring.
Findings
Effective sensor placement improves leak detection speed.
Synthetic wind models enhance planning under wind uncertainty.
Real-time monitoring enables accurate leak localization.
Abstract
This work presents a procedure that can quickly identify and isolate methane emission sources leading to expedient remediation. Minimizing the time required to identify a leak and the subsequent time to dispatch repair crews can significantly reduce the amount of methane released into the atmosphere. The procedure developed utilizes permanently installed low-cost methane sensors at an oilfield facility to continuously monitor leaked gas concentration above background levels. The methods developed for optimal sensor placement and leak inversion in consideration of predefined subspaces and restricted zones are presented. In particular, subspaces represent regions comprising one or more equipment items that may leak, and restricted zones define regions in which a sensor may not be placed due to site restrictions by design. Thus, subspaces constrain the inversion problem to specified…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics · Oil Spill Detection and Mitigation · Water Systems and Optimization
MethodsRepair
