Electrical Impedance Tomography
Electrical Impedance Tomography
Electrical Impedance Tomography (EIT) is a measurement technique for obtaining information about the contents of process vessels and pipelines. Multiple electrodes are arranged around the boundary of the vessel at fixed locations in such a way that they make electrical contact with the fluid inside the vessel but do not affect the flow or movement of materials.
Our z8000 Electrical Impedance Tomography instrument
What of the applications of the technique?
A typical application is real time monitoring of multicomponent flows within process engineering units. Specific applications where EIT can be used include rapid multi-phase systems such as the measurement of flowing oil water systems and hydraulic conveying of slurries. In principle, EIT can be used to investigate and monitor any process where the main continuous phase is at least slightly conducting and the other phases and components have differing values of conductivity.
How does it work?
An EIT system produces a cross-sectional image showing the distribution of electrical conductivity of the contents of a process vessel or pipeline from measurements taking at the boundary of the vessel. The z8000 system injects a current between a pair of electrodes and measures the resultant voltage difference between remaining electrode pairs according to a pre-defined measurement protocol. This interrogates an entire ‘slice' through the measurement zone - analogous to a ‘body-scan' in medical imaging. A single measurement set consists of over 100 voltage measurements - the exact number depends on the pre-defined measurement protocol. An image reconstrcution algorithm processes the voltage measurements to determine the electrical conductivity distribution.


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