Abstract

A major UK initiative, entitled ‘Mapping the Underworld’, is seeking to address the serious social, environmental and economic consequences arising from an inability to locate accurately and comprehensively the buried utility service infrastructure without resorting to extensive excavations. Mapping the Underworld aims to develop and prove the efficacy of a multi-sensor device for accurate remote buried utility service detection, location and, where possible, identification. One of the technologies to be incorporated in the device is low-frequency vibro-acoustics, and application of this technique for detecting buried infrastructure is currently being investigated. Here, the potential for making a number of simple point vibration measurements in order to detect shallow-buried objects, in particular plastic pipes, is explored. Point measurements can be made relatively quickly without the need for arrays of surface sensors, which can be expensive, time-consuming to deploy, and sometimes impractical in congested areas.At low frequencies, the ground behaves as a simple single-degree-of-freedom (mass–spring) system with a well-defined resonance, the frequency of which will depend on the density and elastic properties of the soil locally. This resonance will be altered by the presence of a buried object whose properties differ from the surrounding soil. It is this behavior which can be exploited in order to detect the presence of a buried object, provided it is buried at a sufficiently shallow depth. The theoretical background is described and preliminary measurements are made both on a dedicated buried pipe rig and on the ground over a domestic waste pipe. Preliminary findings suggest that, for shallow-buried pipes, a measurement of this kind could be a quick and useful adjunct to more conventional methods of buried pipe detection.

Highlights

  • The problems associated with inaccurate location of buried pipes and cables have been serious for many years and are getting worse as a result of increasing traffic congestion in the UK’s major urban areas

  • Whilst the results presented in Resonance frequency (Hz) Resonance frequency (Hz)

  • Expressions for the expected mass and stiffness components have been presented and how these might alter in the presence of a shallow-buried object discussed

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Summary

Introduction

The problems associated with inaccurate location of buried pipes and cables have been serious for many years and are getting worse as a result of increasing traffic congestion in the UK’s major urban areas. For dynamic excitation at frequencies greater than zero, there will be a mass component resulting from the mass of the moving part of the exciter and the attached, or radiation, mass. There will be a damping component arising from the radiation of power into the ground from the excitation point (Pinnington, 1988; Miller and Pursey, 1954)

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