Cargando…

An In-Situ Assessment of Wood-in-Service Using Microwave Technologies, with a Focus on Assessing Hardwood Power Poles

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Both termites and decay fungi use wood as a food source. Termites and decay cause major damage and inflict significant costs on human societies around the world. Currently, power pole testing techniques either involve a subjective evaluation, based on the sound that the pole makes wh...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Brodie, Graham, Thanigasalam, Deepan Babu, Farrell, Peter, Kealy, Allison, French, John R. J., Ahmed (Shiday), Berhan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7564177/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32854187
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects11090568
_version_ 1783595653389090816
author Brodie, Graham
Thanigasalam, Deepan Babu
Farrell, Peter
Kealy, Allison
French, John R. J.
Ahmed (Shiday), Berhan
author_facet Brodie, Graham
Thanigasalam, Deepan Babu
Farrell, Peter
Kealy, Allison
French, John R. J.
Ahmed (Shiday), Berhan
author_sort Brodie, Graham
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Both termites and decay fungi use wood as a food source. Termites and decay cause major damage and inflict significant costs on human societies around the world. Currently, power pole testing techniques either involve a subjective evaluation, based on the sound that the pole makes when it is hit by a heavy hammer, or observing wood shaving from holes that are drilled into the core of the pole itself. Drilling is destructive and compromises any protection from wood preservative treatments, allowing termites or decay fungi to enter the pole. This project developed a simple, objective measurement technique, which is based on the transmission of very low power microwave energy through the wood. Two versions of the system were developed, and both could easily distinguish between sound hardwood poles and those which were compromised by decay and termite attack, without compromising the pole’s integrity in any way. These will be of enormous benefit to the power utility industry. ABSTRACT: Wooden power poles and their ongoing inspection represent a significant investment for most electrical power utilities. This study explored the potential for using microwave fields to non-invasively assess the state of hardwood power poles in a field experiment. Two strategies were assessed: 2.4 GHz microwave field transmission through the pole; and mutual coupling between antennae using a 10.525 GHz radar module applied to the surface of the pole. Both systems distinguished between sound hardwood poles and those which were compromised by decay and subterranean termite attack and infestation.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7564177
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-75641772020-10-26 An In-Situ Assessment of Wood-in-Service Using Microwave Technologies, with a Focus on Assessing Hardwood Power Poles Brodie, Graham Thanigasalam, Deepan Babu Farrell, Peter Kealy, Allison French, John R. J. Ahmed (Shiday), Berhan Insects Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Both termites and decay fungi use wood as a food source. Termites and decay cause major damage and inflict significant costs on human societies around the world. Currently, power pole testing techniques either involve a subjective evaluation, based on the sound that the pole makes when it is hit by a heavy hammer, or observing wood shaving from holes that are drilled into the core of the pole itself. Drilling is destructive and compromises any protection from wood preservative treatments, allowing termites or decay fungi to enter the pole. This project developed a simple, objective measurement technique, which is based on the transmission of very low power microwave energy through the wood. Two versions of the system were developed, and both could easily distinguish between sound hardwood poles and those which were compromised by decay and termite attack, without compromising the pole’s integrity in any way. These will be of enormous benefit to the power utility industry. ABSTRACT: Wooden power poles and their ongoing inspection represent a significant investment for most electrical power utilities. This study explored the potential for using microwave fields to non-invasively assess the state of hardwood power poles in a field experiment. Two strategies were assessed: 2.4 GHz microwave field transmission through the pole; and mutual coupling between antennae using a 10.525 GHz radar module applied to the surface of the pole. Both systems distinguished between sound hardwood poles and those which were compromised by decay and subterranean termite attack and infestation. MDPI 2020-08-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7564177/ /pubmed/32854187 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects11090568 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Brodie, Graham
Thanigasalam, Deepan Babu
Farrell, Peter
Kealy, Allison
French, John R. J.
Ahmed (Shiday), Berhan
An In-Situ Assessment of Wood-in-Service Using Microwave Technologies, with a Focus on Assessing Hardwood Power Poles
title An In-Situ Assessment of Wood-in-Service Using Microwave Technologies, with a Focus on Assessing Hardwood Power Poles
title_full An In-Situ Assessment of Wood-in-Service Using Microwave Technologies, with a Focus on Assessing Hardwood Power Poles
title_fullStr An In-Situ Assessment of Wood-in-Service Using Microwave Technologies, with a Focus on Assessing Hardwood Power Poles
title_full_unstemmed An In-Situ Assessment of Wood-in-Service Using Microwave Technologies, with a Focus on Assessing Hardwood Power Poles
title_short An In-Situ Assessment of Wood-in-Service Using Microwave Technologies, with a Focus on Assessing Hardwood Power Poles
title_sort in-situ assessment of wood-in-service using microwave technologies, with a focus on assessing hardwood power poles
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7564177/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32854187
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects11090568
work_keys_str_mv AT brodiegraham aninsituassessmentofwoodinserviceusingmicrowavetechnologieswithafocusonassessinghardwoodpowerpoles
AT thanigasalamdeepanbabu aninsituassessmentofwoodinserviceusingmicrowavetechnologieswithafocusonassessinghardwoodpowerpoles
AT farrellpeter aninsituassessmentofwoodinserviceusingmicrowavetechnologieswithafocusonassessinghardwoodpowerpoles
AT kealyallison aninsituassessmentofwoodinserviceusingmicrowavetechnologieswithafocusonassessinghardwoodpowerpoles
AT frenchjohnrj aninsituassessmentofwoodinserviceusingmicrowavetechnologieswithafocusonassessinghardwoodpowerpoles
AT ahmedshidayberhan aninsituassessmentofwoodinserviceusingmicrowavetechnologieswithafocusonassessinghardwoodpowerpoles
AT brodiegraham insituassessmentofwoodinserviceusingmicrowavetechnologieswithafocusonassessinghardwoodpowerpoles
AT thanigasalamdeepanbabu insituassessmentofwoodinserviceusingmicrowavetechnologieswithafocusonassessinghardwoodpowerpoles
AT farrellpeter insituassessmentofwoodinserviceusingmicrowavetechnologieswithafocusonassessinghardwoodpowerpoles
AT kealyallison insituassessmentofwoodinserviceusingmicrowavetechnologieswithafocusonassessinghardwoodpowerpoles
AT frenchjohnrj insituassessmentofwoodinserviceusingmicrowavetechnologieswithafocusonassessinghardwoodpowerpoles
AT ahmedshidayberhan insituassessmentofwoodinserviceusingmicrowavetechnologieswithafocusonassessinghardwoodpowerpoles