Abstract
Overhead high-voltage conductors are the chief components of power lines and their safety has a strong influence on social and daily life. In the recent decade, the airborne laser scanning (ALS) technique has been widely used to capture the three-dimensional (3D) information of power lines and surrounding objects. Most of the existing methods focused on extraction of single conductors or extracted all conductors as one object class by applying machine learning techniques. Nevertheless, power line corridors (PLCs) are built with multi-loop, multi-phase structures (bundle conductors) and exist in intricate environments (e.g., mountains and forests), and thus raise challenges to process ALS data for extraction of individual conductors. This paper proposes an automated method to extract individual subconductors in bundles from complex structure of PLCs using a combined image- and point-based approach. First, the input point cloud data are grouped into 3D voxel grid and PL points and separated from pylon and tree points using the fact that pylons and trees are vertical objects while power lines are non-vertical objects. These pylons are further separated from trees by employing a statistical analysis technique and used to extract span points between two consecutive pylons; then, by using the distribution properties of power lines in each individual span, the bundles located at different height levels are extracted using image-based processing; finally, subconductors in each bundle are detected and extracted by introducing a window that slides over the individual bundle. The orthogonal plane transformation and recursive clustering procedures are exploited in each window position and a point-based processing is conducted iteratively for extraction of complete individual subconductors in each bundle. The feasibility and validity of the proposed method are verified on two Australian sites having bundle conductors in high-voltage transmission lines. Our experiments show that the proposed method achieves a reliable result by extracting the real structure of bundle conductors in power lines with correctness of 100% and 90% in the two test sites, respectively.
Highlights
High-voltage power lines are one of the major components of the power transmission system that facilitate the delivery of electricity over long distances with a minimum loss of power [1]
This paper presents an automated method for extraction of individual conductors that exist in a bundle by combining grid (i.e., 3D point cloud data is interpolated into a 2D grid space where each pixel represents a point in the input 3D data) and point-based approaches in order to leverage the benefits from both
In the MDP data set, all the 26 pylons and the 28 spans, except the 3 poles and 2 spans located in the distribution line corridor (DLC), are extracted
Summary
High-voltage power lines are one of the major components of the power transmission system that facilitate the delivery of electricity over long distances with a minimum loss of power [1]. In comparison to other remote sensing technologies, airborne LiDAR can acquire accurate and high density 3D point clouds over a large scene covered with natural and structural objects and the collected data can automatically be processed with built-in powerful computer systems. It is highly suitable for forest and hilly terrain due to its access which is not possible with MLS and other vehicle-borne and in-person technologies. There could be a long gap along the conductors where there are no points in the input data These issues raise challenges to process LiDAR data for individual bundle subconductor extraction.
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