Locating underground pipe using wideband chaotic ground penetrating radar

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Abstract

An experimental wideband chaotic ground penetrating radar is proposed to locate underground pipes. A chaotic signal with a bandwidth of 1.56 GHz is utilized as the probe signal. The localization of the pipes is achieved by correlating the chaotic echo signal with its delayed duplicate and back-projection algorithm. Experimental results demonstrate that plastic pipe, metallic pipe, and multiple pipes can be located with a range resolution of 10 cm. Limited by the height of the sand, the detectable range is estimated to be 0.7 m for both the plastic pipes and the metallic pipes when the transmitting power is −12 dBm. The proposed system has the potential to detect buried pipes, and it is suitable for geological and civil engineering applications.

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Li, J., Guo, T., Leung, H., Xu, H., Liu, L., Wang, B., & Liu, Y. (2019). Locating underground pipe using wideband chaotic ground penetrating radar. Sensors (Switzerland), 19(13). https://doi.org/10.3390/s19132913

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