Girth weld cracking is one of the main failure modes in oil and gas pipelines; girth weld cracking inspection has great economic and social significance for the intrinsic safety of pipelines. This paper introduces the typical girth weld defects of oil and gas pipelines and the common nondestructive testing methods, and systematically generalizes the progress in the studies on technical principles, signal analysis, defect sizing method and inspection reliability, etc., of magnetic flux leakage (MFL) inspection, liquid ultrasonic inspection, electromagnetic acoustic transducer (EMAT) inspection and remote field eddy current (RFDC) inspection for oil and gas pipeline girth weld defects. Additionally, it introduces the new technologies for composite ultrasonic, laser ultrasonic, and magnetostriction inspection, and provides reference for development and application of oil and gas pipeline girth weld defect in-line inspection technology.
This paper presents a low-power and low-noise capacitive-feedback amplifier with a current-reused OTA for ECG recordings. To improve the noise-power efficiency, the proposed OTA employs a current-reused architecture, which adopts an inverter-based differential input stage for low noise, and a class-AB output stage for large output range and high g/I efficiency. The driving branch of the class-AB output stage is merged into the input stage to realize current reuse and reduce power consumption further. Fabricated in a 0.35-μm CMOS process, the amplifier consumes 160 nA from a 2-V supply, while achieving an input-referred noise of 2.05 μV, corresponding to a noise efficiency factor (NEF) of 2.26. The measured common-mode rejection ratio (CMRR) and power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) exceed 65 dB and 70 dB, respectively. The total harmonic distortion (THD) is less than 1% with a 15-mV input at 20 Hz and the active area is 0.3 mm × 0.6 mm.
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