Niloy Choudhury
General Electric
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Featured researches published by Niloy Choudhury.
Scientific Reports | 2017
K S Nagapriya; Shashank Sinha; R Prashanth; Samhitha Palanganda Poonacha; Gunaranjan Chaudhry; Anandaroop Bhattacharya; Niloy Choudhury; Saroj Kumar Mahalik; Sandip Maity
In this paper we report a newly developed technique – laser calorimetry spectroscopy (LCS), which is a combination of laser absorption spectroscopy and calorimetry - for the detection of gases dissolved in liquids. The technique involves determination of concentration of a dissolved gas by irradiating the liquid with light of a wavelength where the gas absorbs, and measuring the temperature change caused by the absorbance. Conventionally, detection of dissolved gases with sufficient sensitivity and specificity was done by first extracting the gases from the liquid and then analyzing the gases using techniques such as gas chromatography. Using LCS, we have been able to detect ppm levels of dissolved gases without extracting them from the liquid. In this paper, we show the detection of dissolved acetylene in transformer oil in the mid infrared (MIR) wavelength (3021 nm) region.
Photonic Instrumentation Engineering V | 2018
William Albert Challener; Ansas M. Kasten; Jason Harris Karp; Niloy Choudhury
Recently there has been increased interest on the part of federal and state regulators to detect and quantify emissions of methane, an important greenhouse gas, from various parts of the oil and gas infrastructure including well pads and pipelines. Pressure and/or flow anomalies are typically used to detect leaks along natural gas pipelines, but are generally very insensitive and subject to false alarms. We have developed a system to detect and localize methane leaks along gas pipelines that is an order of magnitude more sensitive by combining tunable diode laser spectroscopy (TDLAS) with conventional sensor tube technology. This technique can potentially localize leaks along pipelines up to 100 km lengths with an accuracy of ±50 m or less. A sensor tube buried along the pipeline with a gas-permeable membrane collects leaking gas during a soak period. The leak plume within the tube is then carried to the nearest sensor node along the tube in a purge cycle. The time-to-detection is used to determine leak location. Multiple sensor nodes are situated along the pipeline to minimize the time to detection, and each node is composed of a short segment of hollow core fiber (HCF) into which leaking gas is transported quickly through a small pressure differential. The HCF sensing node is spliced to standard telecom solid core fiber which transports the laser light for spectroscopy to a remote interrogator. The interrogator is multiplexed across the sensor nodes to minimize equipment cost and complexity.
Fiber Optic Sensors and Applications XIII Conference | 2016
Jason Harris Karp; William Albert Challener; Matthias Kasten; Niloy Choudhury; Sabarni Palit; Gary Pickrell; Daniel Homa; Adam Floyd; Yujie Cheng; Fei Yu; Jonathan C. Knight
The increase in domestic natural gas production has brought attention to the environmental impacts of persistent gas leakages. The desire to identify fugitive gas emission, specifically for methane, presents new sensing challenges within the production and distribution supply chain. A spectroscopic gas sensing solution would ideally combine a long optical path length for high sensitivity and distributed detection over large areas. Specialty micro-structured fiber with a hollow core can exhibit a relatively low attenuation at mid-infrared wavelengths where methane has strong absorption lines. Methane diffusion into the hollow core is enabled by machining side-holes along the fiber length through ultrafast laser drilling methods. The complete system provides hundreds of meters of optical path for routing along well pads and pipelines while being interrogated by a single laser and detector. This work will present transmission and methane detection capabilities of mid-infrared photonic crystal fibers. Side-hole drilling techniques for methane diffusion will be highlighted as a means to convert hollow-core fibers into applicable gas sensors.
Archive | 2017
William Albert Challener; Niloy Choudhury; Sabarni Palit
international conference on information fusion | 2016
Marco Guerriero; Frederick Wilson Wheeler; Sachin Narahari Dekate; Niloy Choudhury
Archive | 2014
Sandip Maity; Nagapriya Kavoori Sethumadhavan; Niloy Choudhury
Archive | 2017
William Albert Challener; Sabarni Palit; Jason Harris Karp; Ansas M. Kasten; Niloy Choudhury
Archive | 2017
Niloy Choudhury; William Albert Challener
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2016
William Albert Challener; Niloy Choudhury; Jason Harris Karp; Ansas M. Kasten; Sabarni Palit; Gary Pickrell; Daniel Homa; Adam Floyd; Yujie Cheng; Fei Yu
Archive | 2014
Niloy Choudhury; Nagapriya Kavoori Sethumadhavan; Sandip Maity