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What is an Online Acoustic Camera? A Technical Deep Dive into Continuous Sound Source Localization

Par Dong Wu March 9th, 2026 18 vues

In the landscape of Industry 4.0, predictive maintenance has evolved beyond vibration analysis and thermal imaging. A new technology is emerging as an essential tool for asset monitoring: the online acoustic camera. But what exactly is it, and how does it work under the hood?

This article provides a technical exploration of online acoustic cameras—their core components, working principles, and how they integrate with modern industrial systems to deliver continuous, intelligent fault detection.


1. Definition: Beyond Handheld Inspection

An online acoustic camera is a permanently installed, intelligent monitoring device that continuously visualizes sound sources in real time, enabling automated fault detection and diagnostics in industrial environments.

Unlike handheld acoustic cameras used for periodic spot checks or manual troubleshooting, online versions are engineered for 24/7 fixed installation—mounting on walls, poles, or integrated with robotic systems—to provide uninterrupted surveillance of critical assets such as transformers, pipelines, switchgear, and rotating machinery.


2. Core Technology: How It Works

At the heart of every online acoustic camera lies a sophisticated fusion of hardware and software:

2.1 MEMS Microphone Array

Modern online acoustic cameras utilize MEMS (Micro-Electromechanical Systems) microphone arrays, typically consisting of 64 to 128 channels. Compared to traditional electret microphones, MEMS offer:

  • Superior consistency: Matched phase and sensitivity across all channels

  • Compact form factor: Enabling smaller, lighter industrial enclosures

  • Wide frequency response: Typically covering 2 kHz to 65 kHz, spanning both audible and ultrasonic ranges

  • Environmental durability: Better tolerance to temperature variations and vibration

2.2 Optical Camera Core

A high-resolution optical camera (typically 1080p or higher) captures the visual scene. The acoustic data is overlaid onto this video feed, creating an intuitive visual representation of sound sources.

2.3 Beamforming Algorithms

The magic of acoustic imaging lies in beamforming—a signal processing technique that combines signals from multiple microphones to determine the direction of sound sources.

Key technical aspects:

  • Delay-and-sum beamforming: The most common algorithm, applying time delays to align signals from each microphone before summation

  • Frequency-dependent resolution: Lower frequencies require larger arrays for precise localization; higher frequencies enable sharper spatial resolution

  • Real-time processing: Modern DSPs and FPGAs process 130k samples per second across all channels to generate sound maps at 25-30 FPS

The output is a sound map—a color overlay (typically red for high intensity, blue for low) superimposed on the video image, showing exactly where the sound originates.


3. Detection Capabilities: What Can It Find?

Online acoustic cameras are optimized for three primary industrial applications:

3.1 Partial Discharge (PD) Detection

In high-voltage equipment, insulation degradation causes partial discharges that emit ultrasonic energy. Acoustic cameras can:

  • Classify PD types: Corona discharge (surface), floating discharge (gap), and surface discharge (along insulation)

  • Locate the exact source: Pinpoint discharge points within switchgear, transformers, or cable terminations

  • Monitor trends: Track PD activity over time to predict failure

3.2 Gas Leak Detection

Pressurized gas leaks generate broadband ultrasonic noise. Advanced systems can:

  • Detect leaks down to 0.035 l/min at 120KPa from 0.3m

  • Estimate leak rate and cost: Using proprietary algorithms based on pressure, distance, and acoustic intensity

  • Localize in noisy environments: Filter out background industrial noise

3.3 Mechanical Anomalies

Rotating machinery emits characteristic acoustic signatures. Online monitoring can detect:

  • Bearing wear and lubrication failure

  • Cavitation in pumps

  • Valve leakage and steam trap failure


4. Intelligence: Edge Computing and AI

What transforms an acoustic camera from a simple sensor into a diagnostic tool is onboard intelligence:

4.1 Edge Processing

All acoustic data is processed locally on the device:

  • No reliance on central servers: Minimizes latency and network bandwidth

  • Instant alerts: Fault detection in milliseconds

  • Privacy and security: Sensitive acoustic data never leaves the facility

4.2 AI-Driven Diagnostics

Hertzinno's systems are trained on over 5 million industrial acoustic signatures, enabling:

  • Pattern recognition: Distinguish between partial discharge, mechanical noise, and environmental sounds

  • Type prediction: Identify specific fault categories (e.g., corona vs. floating discharge)

  • Anomaly detection: Flag deviations from normal operating baselines

4.3 Voiceprint Matching

Advanced AI models create acoustic "fingerprints" for each asset. When a fault occurs, the system matches the signature against known patterns, providing instant diagnosis.


5. Integration: Connecting to Industrial Systems

Online acoustic cameras are designed as IIoT devices, supporting standard industrial protocols:

5.1 Data Transmission

  • Ethernet/HTTP: Primary interface for configuration and data retrieval

  • RTSP streaming: Real-time video and sound map delivery to any standard viewer

  • WebSocket: Real-time API for integration with SCADA, DCS, and custom dashboards

5.2 Robotic Integration

Compact, lightweight designs (approx. 900g to 1.6kg) allow mounting on:

  • Autonomous Mobile Robots (AMRs) for flexible inspection routes

  • Unmanned Ground Vehicles (UGVs) for hazardous area inspection

  • Fixed gantries for production line monitoring

5.3 Multi-Sensor Fusion

Models like the HZ-FA-371T add a 640×512 resolution thermal imaging module, enabling:

  • Correlation of acoustic events with temperature anomalies

  • Dual-validation of partial discharges (acoustic signature + heat generation)

  • Comprehensive asset health monitoring from a single device


6. Environmental and Certification Considerations

Industrial deployment demands ruggedness:

  • Protection ratings: IP65/IP66 for dust and water ingress protection

  • Temperature range: Operation from -20°C to 70°C, storage from -30°C to 70°C

  • Hazardous area certification: Ex ib IIC T4 Gb (gas) and Ex ib IIIC T80°C Db (dust), suitable for Zone 1/2 and Zone 21/22 environments


7. Advantages Over Traditional Monitoring

Aspect Traditional Methods Online Acoustic Camera
Coverage Periodic spot checks Continuous 24/7
Fault detection Visual/thermal only Acoustic + optional thermal
Intermittent faults Often missed Captured automatically
Integration Manual reporting SCADA/DCS/API-ready
Localization Approximate Visual sound map overlay

8. Conclusion: Sound as a Predictive Maintenance Strategy

In the era of Industry 4.0, online acoustic cameras serve as an essential predictive maintenance tool, transforming sound into actionable insights. By continuously monitoring the acoustic spectrum—from audible mechanical noise to ultrasonic partial discharges—these intelligent devices enable:

  • Prevention of unplanned downtime through early fault detection

  • Enhanced safety by identifying hazards before they escalate

  • Optimized asset performance through data-driven maintenance planning

As sensor fusion advances and AI models grow more sophisticated, the online acoustic camera will become as ubiquitous in industrial monitoring as thermal imaging and vibration analysis are today.


Ready to explore how online acoustic imaging can benefit your facility?

Contact Hertzinno for a technical consultation or to request a demo of the HZ-FA-371 and HZ-FA-371T series.

The Ultimate Technical Guide to Industrial Acoustic Cameras: Principles, Parameters, and Applications,Hertzinno
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