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Detecting district heating leaks in thermal imagery: Comparison of anomaly detection methods

Elena Vollmer, Julian Ruck, Rebekka Volk, Frank Schultmann

2024Automation in Construction14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

District heating systems offer means to transport heat to end-energy users through underground pipelines. When leakages occur, a lack of reliable monitoring makes pinpointing their locations a difficult and costly task for network operators. In recent years, aerial thermography has emerged as a means to find leakages as hot-spots, with several papers proposing image analysis algorithms for their detection. While all publications boast high performance metrics, the methods are constructed around very different datasets, making a true comparison impossible. Using a new set of aerial thermal images from two German cities, this paper implements, improves, and evaluates three anomaly detection methods for leakage detection: triangle-histogram-thresholding, saliency mapping, and local thresholding with filter kernels. The approaches are integrated into a software pipeline with globally applicable pre- and postprocessing, including vignetting correction. While all methods reliably detect thermal anomalies and are suitable for automated leakage detection, triangle-histogram-thresholding is the most robust. • Processing pipeline for automatic leakage detection in airborne thermal imagery. • Implementation, enhancement, and evaluation of three anomaly detection methods. • Grid search for parameter definition of best algorithm variants. • Triangle-histogram-thresholding most robust method for thermal anomaly detection. • Preprocessing such as vignetting correction has significant performance impact.

Topics & Concepts

Anomaly detectionAnomaly (physics)Remote sensingComputer scienceEnvironmental scienceGeologyArtificial intelligencePhysicsCondensed matter physicsVisual Attention and Saliency DetectionRemote-Sensing Image ClassificationInfrared Target Detection Methodologies
Detecting district heating leaks in thermal imagery: Comparison of anomaly detection methods | Litcius