A Swedish company has developed an aircraft based system using a FLIR SC7600 thermal imaging camera that can monitor and maintain local district heating networks
According to some researchers district heating is the cheapest method for a city to cut on carbon emissions, but maintaining a large district heating network can be a difficult task.
In Scandinavia district heating systems have been installed in many of the larger cities and a significant portion of the district heating infrastructure is quite old.
Old pipes tend to degenerate over time due to corrosion and will eventually start to leak.
Finding these leaks with conventional means is quite difficult.
To solve this problem the thermography experts at Termisk Systemteknik mounted a FLIR SC7600 on the bottom of a small plane.
By flying over the city and recording the thermal images, a thermal map is produced of the entire city on which district heating leaks can be detected and located.
An automatic detection system was used on the thermal data to automatically point out leaks and other issues to the district heat maintenance teams.
The FLIR SC7600 thermal imaging camera that was used for the district heating monitoring system contains a cooled Indium Antimonide (InSb) infrared detector that produces thermal images with a resolution of 640 x 512 pixels at a thermal sensitivity of 20mK (0.02 degC).
The FLIR SC7600 proved especially useful for this application because of its high frame rate and short integration time.
The camera was able to capture full resolution thermal images at a frame rate of 100 Hz.