Selasa, 16 Februari 2016

Crack detection in gas pipelines


High pressure long distance pipelines transporting gas, crude oil or products are inspected by intelligent pigs for the location of defects. These inspections are an important contribution to the continued safe operation of these pipelines.
Typical defects are geometrical anomalies, metal loss and crack-like defects. Intelligent pigs are measuring robots which are propelled through the pipeline to detect defects, using appropriate measuring techniques.
For geometrical anomalies, pigs with mechanical sensors have been used for many years. It is customary to inspect new pipelines with calliper pigs prior to commissioning.
In the 1970s metal loss (corrosion) was the type of anomaly that caused the development of the first intelligent pigs. For metal loss two technologies are customarily used: the ultrasonic method, which measures the wall thickness directly, or the magnetic flux leakage (MFL) method, which responds to the change of the magnetic field in the presence of metal loss.
The ultrasonic method is the more accurate method, but a coupling liquid is required to apply the ultrasonic pulse to the pipe wall. It is therefore mainly used in liquid pipelines. The MFL method, on the other hand, does not require a coupling liquid and is therefore the preferred method for gas pipelines. Both types of instrument have been operated for many years and play a central role in the upkeep and maintenance of high pressure long distance pipelines.
During the 1990s longitudinal crack like defects began to appear additionally in more and more pipelines causing serious problems. This led to the development of a new generation of crack detection pigs.
Types of Cracks
Even though isolated fatigue cracks have been seen since the 1970s, it was the increased appearance of stress corrosion cracking (SCC) defects in the 1990s that led to some spectacular pipeline failures in Russia and North America. Figure 1 shows typical SCC colony.
SCC develops in pipelines under narrowly defined conditions. These include: susceptibility of the steel, moisture of the soil, soil chemistry, quality of the coating, variable stress and highly increased temperatures. SCC first appeared in the above mentioned areas mainly in high pressure pipelines directly downstream of compressor stations and now also occurs more and more often in liquid pipelines, even though these lines do not display increased temperatures.
Apart from SCC, metal fatigue cracks are becoming increasingly common, mainly due to the increasing accumulated number of pressure cycles in the aging pipeline population.
Cracks, which influence the structural integrity of the pipeline, are mainly longitudinally orientated, caused by the predominant stress distribution in the steel. Fatigue cracks can grow both from the internal or the external surface of the wall. Because of the growth mechanism, SCC cracks are external defects.


  Source : http://pipeliner.com.au/news/crack_detection_in_gas_pipelines/43294

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