Litcius/Paper detail

Simulation Study of Utilizing X-ray Tube in Monitoring Systems of Liquid Petroleum Products

Gholam Hossein Roshani, Peshawa Jamal Muhammad Ali, Shivan Mohammed, Robert Hanus, Lokman A. Abdulkareem, Adnan Alhathal Alanezi, Mohammad Sattari, Saba Amiri, Ehsan Nazemi, Ehsan Eftekhari-Zadeh, El Mostafa Kalmoun

2021Processes34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Radiation-based instruments have been widely used in petrochemical and oil industries to monitor liquid products transported through the same pipeline. Different radioactive gamma-ray emitter sources are typically used as radiation generators in the instruments mentioned above. The idea at the basis of this research is to investigate the use of an X-ray tube rather than a radioisotope source as an X-ray generator: This choice brings some advantages that will be discussed. The study is performed through a Monte Carlo simulation and artificial intelligence. Here, the system is composed of an X-ray tube, a pipe including fluid, and a NaI detector. Two-by-two mixtures of four various oil products with different volume ratios were considered to model the pipe’s interface region. For each combination, the X-ray spectrum was recorded in the detector in all the simulations. The recorded spectra were used for training and testing the multilayer perceptron (MLP) models. After training, MLP neural networks could estimate each oil product’s volume ratio with a mean absolute error of 2.72 which is slightly even better than what was obtained in former studies using radioisotope sources.

Topics & Concepts

DetectorMonte Carlo methodRadiationCollimatorMultilayer perceptronVolume (thermodynamics)Common emitterNuclear engineeringTube (container)Petroleum productX-ray tubeComputer scienceArtificial neural networkOpticsMaterials scienceProcess engineeringPhysicsPetroleumMechanical engineeringEngineeringChemistryArtificial intelligenceOptoelectronicsMathematicsOrganic chemistryAnodeElectrodeStatisticsQuantum mechanicsNuclear Physics and ApplicationsFault Detection and Control SystemsSpectroscopy and Chemometric Analyses