Publications
Internal 2-D Surface Temperature Measurements for Large Complex Geometries
For 2D-temperature monitoring applications, a variant of EIT (Electrical Impedance Tomography) is evaluated computationally in this work. Literature examples of poor sensor performance in the center of the 2D domains away from the side electrodes motivated this study which seeks to overcome some of the previously noted shortcomings. In particular, the use of ‘sensing skins’ with novel tailored baseline conductivities were examined using the EIDORS package for EIT. It was found that the best approach for detecting a hot spot depends on several factors such as the current injection (stimulation) patterns, the measurement patterns, and the reconstruction algorithms. For a well-performing combination of these factors, tailored baseline conductivities were assessed and compared to the baseline uniform conductivity. It was discovered that for some EIT applications, a tailored distribution needs to be smooth and that sudden changes in the conductivity gradients should be avoided. Still, the benefits in terms of improved EIT performance were small for conditions for which the EIT measurements had been ‘optimized’ for the uniform baseline case. Within the limited scope of this study, only two specific cases showed benefits from tailored distributions. For one case, a smooth tailored distribution with increased baseline conductivity in the center provided a better separation of two centrally located hot spots. For another case, a smooth tailored distribution with reduced conductivity in the center provided better estimates of the magnitudes of two hot spots near the center of the sensing skin.