Monitoring of inventory in enclosed turbulent liquid tanks using floating gamma-ray sources
Abstract
An accurate and simple technique utilizing a low-intensity gamma-ray source floating in a vertical tube, whose configuration is tank geometry and size dependent, is shown to eliminate the disturbing effects of turbulent fluid on enclosed tank liquid inventory measurement. The vertical tube aligns the source with detectors positioned outside of the tank, and collapses the turbulent liquid surface to a true average level. The exit attenuation of the information carrying high energy gamma rays is insensitive to liquid surface tubulence, and sensing probe penetrations are not necessary. It is found that for a half-full tank, 1.0 percent statistical error, and 1-s measuring times, that a 220 C Ce-137 source is required for an 8-ft high tank. Consistent experimental results are found for the dual detector method, and results indicate that the accuracy of the scanning side detector method is dependent on the quality of the collimator and degree of lower level energy discrimination.
- Publication:
-
31st International Instrumentation Symposium
- Pub Date:
- 1985
- Bibcode:
- 1985isa..symp..705K
- Keywords:
-
- Cryogenic Fluid Storage;
- Fuel Tanks;
- Gamma Rays;
- Inventories;
- Liquid-Vapor Interfaces;
- Remote Sensing;
- Radiation Sources;
- Turbulent Flow;
- Instrumentation and Photography