Demonstration of an Automated Oil Spill Detection System

Abstract

Current spill detection and response strategies rely solely upon the use of human observation to visually detect the presence of a surface sheen indicative of a petroleum spill. The practice of relying upon human observers to detect spills, even when conscientiously applied, has severe shortcomings. Spills often occur at unanticipated times or places in which no one is present to see and report the event. The Spill Sentry automated oil spill monitoring/alarm sensor technology was developed to address the need for rapid reliable spill detection. The objectives of this ESTCP demonstration were to validate the newly developed automated oil spill sensor technology under real-world conditions and to promote rapid transition to DoD users by facilitating commercialization, user awareness, and regulatory acceptance. To meet these objectives, year-long field demonstrations were conducted at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Langley Air Force Base, Norfolk Naval Station, and Pearl Harbor Naval Station. In addition, in order to validate the system under controlled conditions and to verify performance parameters, wave-tank testing was conducted at the Ohmsett National Oil Spill Response Test Facility in Leonardo, New Jersey. The system detects petroleum contamination in aquatic systems with an upward-looking, in-water, multispectral, underwater fluorometer. The sensor continuously records hydrocarbon data via a wireless link to a base station computer. The computer serves to log, process, and display data in real time; it provides automated telephonic alarming in the event of a detected spill; and supports real-time remote data access through inter or intranet. The system met or exceeded performance objectives for spill detection, effectiveness in the presence of waves, window biofouling prevention, maintenance, ease of use, deployment \201locating\202, spectral background interference, and oil type discrimination. The system did not meet objectives for reliability \201up time\202 an

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Apr 01, 2003
Accession Number
ADA604310

Entities

Organizations

  • Environmental Security Technology Certification Program

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Ground and Sea Platforms
  • Sensors
  • Weapons Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Force Facilities
  • Communication Systems
  • Data Analysis
  • Data Links
  • Detection
  • Detectors
  • Lessons Learned
  • Local Area Networks
  • Naval Shore Facilities
  • Network Protocols
  • Optical Detection
  • Optical Detectors
  • Petroleum
  • Test And Evaluation
  • Test Facilities
  • Warning Systems
  • Wireless Communications

Readers

  • Marine Ecotoxicology
  • Sensor Fusion and Tracking Systems.
  • Systems Analysis and Design