5e61bfa160e4d910eb0202e897063307.ppt
- Количество слайдов: 35
Uncertainty Analysis for Flow Measurements and Techniques using Standardized Methodology Marian Muste 1 Juan Gonzalez-Castro 2 Dongsu Kim 1 Kwonkyu Yu 1 1 IIHR- Hydroscience & Engineering, The University of Iowa 2 South-Florida Water Management District, West Palm Beach
Overview n Background n Uncertainty Analysis (UA) Frameworks n n AIAA (1995) UA Implementation Example n Methodology n Assessment of Elemental Uncertainties n Customized GUI for UA Implementation n Conclusions n Outlook
Background SAMPLE REQUEST regarding uncertainty analysis originated from a Hydrologic Service …. Has anybody out there had to defend the validity of an ADCP flow measurement against a legal challenge from a third party? ……When current meters were used to undertake these measurements we could claim that the flow measurement was undertaken in conformance with British and International standards for current meter gauging and that the current meter had a valid calibration certificate… In the case where flow measurements are now taken using ADCPs we feel more vulnerable to legal challenges. This is for two reasons: 1. There is no ISO document in place. The Agency has to rely on its own internal document on gauging procedures which is based on the draft ISO document. 2. ADCPs do not have "certificates of calibration". The only checks on the performance that can be made are against other ADCPs or other types of flow monitoring equipment. (posted on the USGS’ Hydro-Acoustics Work Group webpage by R. Iredale, The Environment Agency of England Wales, 2005)
UA Frameworks Over the last 50 years, considerable efforts have been made by professional societies to develop and implement uncertainty analysis (UA). One of the rigorous UA methodology (based on sound statistical and engineering concepts): Guide to the Expression of Uncertainty Measurement (ISO, 1993) - adopted widely by various scientific & research communities, e. g. , NIST (1994), NF ENV 13005 (1999) - the guide recognizes the need for further adaptation for specific areas Specific adaptations for engineering: - Assessment of Wind Tunnel Data Uncertainty (AIAA, 1995) - Test Uncertainty (ASME, 1998) Key assumptions/concepts for ISO (1993)-based standards - Gaussian pdf-s for the error sources - 2 sample standard deviations for 95% confidence level - for large samples (N ≥ 10), special procedures for handling small samples - RSS used for combining uncertainties - Taylor-series expansion for propagation of uncertainties - total uncertainties expressed using confidence intervals
UA Frameworks Terminology for ISO (1993) - based standards The 3 standards provide the same total measurement uncertainty
AIAA (1995) Engineering approach, simple, clear, widely applied § Bias error (b): fixed, systematic § Bias limit (B): estimate of b § Precision error (e): random § Precision limit (P): estimate of e § Total error: d = b + e
AIAA (1995) Implementation Sequence Key feature: data-reduction equation r = r(X 1, X 2, X 3, …, Xj)
AIAA (1995) Implementation Aspects n n n Measurement systems for each individual variable Xi : instrument, data acquisition and reduction procedures, operational environment (laboratory, in situ), the flow and its interaction with the instrument and the environment Estimates of errors are meaningful only when considered in the context of the process leading to the value of the quantity under consideration Uncertainties estimated following the signal propagation from sensor to the final result Uncertainties estimated with a pre-established confidence level (95% for most engineering areas) UA differently conducted dependent on the type of experiment: n n Single test (for complex or expensive experiments): one set of measurements (X 1, X 2, …, Xj) for r Multiple tests (ideal situations): many sets of measurements (X 1, X 2, …, Xj) for r at a fixed test condition with the same measurement system
AIAA (1995) MULTIPLE TESTS (recommended) Given a data reduction equation for a measurement The result and its uncertainty is The uncertainty in the final result where the bias limit of the result is and the precision limit of the result is with
AIAA (1995) SINGLE TEST Given a data reduction equation for a measurement The result and its uncertainty is The uncertainty in the final result where the bias limit of the result is and the precision limit of the result is Based on prior information
AIAA (1995) Implementation Aspects § sound engineering judgment to optimize the output with minimum costs, e. g. : § use of end-to-end uncertainty estimation approach § uncertainty sources < 1/4 or 1/5 of the largest sources are usually considered negligible § specific procedures for single and multiple measurements § specific procedures for dealing with small statistical samples § methodology for assessment of calibration uncertainties § methodology for data validation
AIAA (1995) Implementation Aspects § Integration of UA in all phases of the measurement
AIAA (1995) IMPLEMENTATION EXAMPLE § Extensively used in laboratory measurements and field conditions, from simple (Pitot tube) to complex (LDV) instruments § Widely applied for teaching and research purposes § Successful implementation to discharge measurements: § conventional instruments (Muste et al. 2007) § contemporary, nonintrusive techniques: § Large-Scale Particle Image Velocimetry (Y-S. Kim et al, 2007) § Acoustic-Doppler Current Profilers (Gonzalez-Castro & Muste, 2007)
ADCP UA: Implementation n Currently, ADCPs are the most efficient instrument for riverine environment characterization (monitoring and research needs) If properly operated, the instrument can accurately document discharges, mean velocities, and selected turbulence characteristics Despite their extensive use, there aspects regarding their capabilities, operation, and uncertainty analysis not documented yet
ADCP UA: Implementation ADCP Uncertainty Analysis (UA) status Past efforts (non-standardized methodologies) n n Discharge: Simpson & Oltman (1992), Gordon (1993), Lipscomb (1995), Morlock (1996), Simpson (2001), Gartner (2002), Muller (2002), Yorke & Oberg (2002), USGS-RDI (2005) Turbulence measurements: Droz (1998), Stacey (1999), Nystrom (2002), Schemper & Admiraal (2002) On-going efforts (standardized methodology) n UA formulated within the framework of authoritative engineering standards
ADCP UA: Implementation Discharge Measurement with ADCP mounted on a boat where
ADCP UA: Elemental Uncertainty Assessment Error identification
ADCP UA: Implementation Data Reduction Equations (Teledyne/RDI’s ADCP)
ADCP UA: Implementation Exact approach – discharge in the direct measured area § Using BT
ADCP UA: Implementation Exact approach: in-bin discharge § Using BT If , the discharge is a functional relationship of the form:
ADCP UA: Implementation Exact approach – top and bottom discharges (extrapolation)
ADCP UA: Implementation Uncertainty Propagation to Final Result: Bias Limit
ADCP UA: Implementation Uncertainty Propagation to Final Result: Precision Limit Uncertainty Propagation to Final Result: Total Uncertainty
ADCP UA: Implementation Practical approach (pitch and roll neglected in DRE; errors accounted through end-to-end calibrations) § velocity (instrument coordinates neglecting the pitch and roll angle) where q = beam angle, a = angle of the flow to instrument β = angle of the boat velocity = in beam water velocities = boat velocity § total discharge
ADCP UA Software - architecture • • Developing tools - Borland C++ Builder (v. 6) & Microsoft Access Software Configuration
ADCP UA Software - GUIs Archive database - Elemental uncertainties are archived in categories based on river characteristics. - Users with limited level of preparedness can estimate uncertainties using default values obtained in similar environment and operating conditions. - The stored information is updated as soon as new measurements are processed. - User can also create new archives using new classification categories
ADCP UA Software - GUIs Information for archiving
ADCP UA Software - GUIs Assessment of bias limit
ADCP UA Software - GUIs Assessment of precision limit
ADCP UA Software & GUIs Assessment of total uncertainty
Conclusions § Feasibility of UA engineering standards for implementation to ADCP measurements § The methodology is comprehensive, simple to implement § Easily upgradeable as new info occur § UA allows tracing of the measurement accuracy to primary standards withstand legal and strict QA/QC requirements § Finalization of UA – an extensive and expensive effort Collaboration between manufacturers and users in a coordinated effort = key to complete UA for the variety of measurement situations and operating conditions encountered in monitoring practice § The framework was adopted by ASCE’s HME Task Committee and the UNESCO group on Data Requirements for Integrated Urban Water Management (Fletcher et al. , 2007) § Currently evaluated by the ISO committee (Herschy)
Conclusions n n n The UA customized software for ADCP velocity and discharge measurements requires minimum user preparation Autoarchiving uncertainties for specific environments and operating conditions can provide information about dominant sources of uncertainties at various sites. By continuously increasing the sample size through archiving, the UA output is progressively enhanced.
Outlook § Work closely with manufacturers and users to assess elemental error sources (manufacturer, operator, environment, or combinations) and integrate them in the AIAA (1995) uncertainty assessment framework for rigorous documenting velocity and discharge measurement accuracy § Conduct sensitivity analysis and field tests for compiling uncertainty minimizations guidelines § Develop operational guidelines for conducting accurate measurements in various flow regimes
Outlook § Need for coordination and extensive collaboration among ADCP manufacturer, operators, data users, and third-party evaluators § Need for evaluation of the status of current developments and to strategize for integrative efforts to assess methodologies for operation and accuracy assessment of the ADCP as well as other flow measurement techniques over an extend the range of flow conditions (present WMO effort) § IIHR is willing to be actively involved in the WMO initiative
Thank you! Questions?