Abstract

Abstract Flow pattern identification (FPI) is crucial for evaluating air entrapment in water pipelines and ensuring the safety of pipeline operations. The presence of two-phase flow in water pipelines not only leads to pressure fluctuations but also induces pipeline vibration. However, current research has primarily focused on using pressure-related signals for FPI, and the analysis of vibration signals in FPI is rare. In this study, FPI in water pipelines is investigated based on convolutional neural networks (CNNs) using high-frequency vibration signals. The information fusion of vibration signals in FPI is newly proposed via the stacked generalization technique. The proposed method is compared with pressure signal-based FPI methods and the effect of signal sampling parameters on FPI accuracy is discussed. The results show that the performance of vibration signals (including axial or radial acceleration signals) outperforms pressure signals in both time and frequency domains. Moreover, the fusion of vibration signals shows the superior results compared to any univariate signals. The duration of sampling has a more significant impact on the results of FPI than the sampling frequency. This study provides a new way that FPI theory is applied to solve air entrapment evaluation in water pipelines.

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