Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
754460 | Applied Acoustics | 2014 | 8 Pages |
We have developed spectral signal processing methods for passive acoustic anomaly detection in nuclear power plants. Furthermore, we compared the developed and existing methods by applying them to stationary sounds recorded in a controlled environment. Our new methods show significant improvement, in particular concerning robustness against false alarms. The results also demonstrate that clear detection of a given sound at a given signal-to-noise ratio is highly dependent on the distribution of characteristic frequency content in the spectrum in relation to the background noise and the spectral uncertainty. Since the frequency monitoring principle used here is quite rigid, we stress the need for research on more flexible methods, also taking into account differences between experiments and real reactor systems.