Eurocorr2010 9145
Eurocorr2010 9145
Paper #9145
Summary
With todays electronic instrumentation, it is possible to combine close interval potential surveys (CIPS) with direct current voltage gradient surveys (DCVG) of buried and
underwater pipelines for improved accuracy in assessing the level of cathodic protection combined with locating coating defects without spatial errors. Modern electronic
survey instruments are capable of stamping each reading with the time, date and submetre GPS coordinates. This provides information for accurate mapping of the pipeline location, current state of the cathodic protection system, and further allows personnel to accurately locate areas requiring excavation for coating repair. This paper
will show by example how combined CIPS and DCVG surveys undertaken to NACE
standards are of benefit to pipeline operators in ensuring cost- and time-effective integrity management of their pipeline systems.
Introduction
Further, if the
surveys are not
done
A DCVG survey
locates coating
defects; it does
not indicate the
level of cathodic
polarization on a
pipeline.
A
DCVG
survey
consists of applying
pulsed
DC current to a
pipeline by
synchronously
Figure 3 Current
Interrupter
The equivalent hemisphere associated with a defect as expressed in Earth Resistances written by G.F. Tagg published by George Newnes Ltd. London England in
1964 is presented here.
The total resistance of a hemispherical electrode is
the sphere. This assumes that the defect in question is of similar surface to a sphere
where the length of the defect is equivalent to 2r.
99.5%
1m
10m
20m
On the surface, the probes are positioned so that one electrode is on top of the pipe
and the second is a distance away. Assuming that the depth is d and the probe spacing is l then the distance to read the total resistance is dr.
Table 2 Probe Spacing to Read Total Voltage Gradient for Various Defect Sizes
Probe spacing for DCVG at a depth of 1.5m
Defect radius
95%
99%
99.5%
5mm
Wont read
Wont read
Wont read
50mm
Wont read
4.8m
9.9m
100mm
1.3m
9.9m
19.9m
Note: that the deeper the pipe, the less likely DCVG will pick up small defects.
It is apparent from the above calculations that a small holiday at a depth of
1.5 meters has an equivalent hemisphere that does not intersect the surface
of the ground above the pipeline and will
not be detected by DCVG techniques.
Figure 6 shows the Equipotential lines
about a defect.
Since DCVG does not measure the rectifier ON or OFF pipe-to-soil potential,
practitioners have had to arrive at some
method to determine the necessity of
repairing the coating defect or holiday.
The result is a formula described as %
IR.
2.2
DCVG % IR Calculation
The NACE test method TM0109-2009 offers a formula to determine the severity of a
coating defect or holiday.
Indication pipe to remote earth DCVG signal magnitudes (P/RE) are calculated using
the following formula.
3
dx (S1 S2)
Coating Fault P/RE = S1 + -------------------(d2 d1)
Where:
P/RE = Pipe to remote earth DCVG signal magnitude (mV)
S1 = DCVG signal amplitude to remote earth at Test Station 1 (mV)
S2 = DCVG signal amplitude to remote earth at Test Station 2 (mV)
d1 = Distance measurement of Test Station 1 (This is zero at the beginning of a survey.) (m)
d2 = Distance measurement of Test Station 2 (m)
dx = Distance measurement of indication from Test Station 1 (m)
Note: The distance between any two test posts should be kept as small as possible. It
is not acceptable to simply use the difference between on and off pipe-to-soil potentials at test points (S1 and S2) as the DCVG signal magnitude. All DCVG magnitude
measurements must include the voltage gradient from the test station to ground as
well as the sum of the voltage gradients to remote earth
2.3
Once an indication is located, its % IR is estimated by measuring the potential difference from the indication epicenter to remote earth (OL/RE). This potential difference is
then expressed as a percentage of the total calculated potential shift on the pipeline at
the indication location (P/RE), as shown in the Equation below.
Calculated Pipe to Remote Earth at Indication mV
%IR(Coating Indication Severity) =
or
% IR
OL/RE * 100
------------------ For Example
P/RE
55 *100
---------- = 9.4
587.4
Close interval potential surveys (CIPS) are the mainstay of cathodic protection and are
usually undertaken by a surveyor walking over the pipeline measuring the rectifier ON
and Instant OFF (polarized) pipe-to-soil potentials at regular intervals along the pipeline (See Figure 7). Since the indicator of the polarized potential is the instant OFF
4
pipe-to-soil potential, it is important that the rectifiers be interrupted synchronously preferably using the GPS system for
synchronization (See Figure 3). A properly conducted CIPS
survey will indicate those areas of the pipeline that meet the
criterion for cathodic protection (See NACE SP0169-2007
Standard).
A DCVG survey will locate coating holidays or defects, but it can not indicate the
level of cathodic polarization. A number of
practitioners of DCVG surveys have tried
to develop a formula that would indicate
the magnitude of a coating defect.
Figure 11 Graph of Voltage Gradient at
a Defect
4.1
One proposed formula for calculating the % IR for combined CIPS and DCVG surveys
developed by R. A. Gummow and S. Segall and R. Reid is as follows.
For a combined CIPS DCVG survey the %IR can be calculated as follows:
K(d,s) * G ol-d
%IR = ------------------------------- V ol + G ol-d
Where:
G ol-d lateral gradient shift as measured between a reference electrode installed
over the line (RE1) and a reference electrode (RE2) installed at a distance (s) perpendicular to the line.
V ol potential shift between the pipe and a reference electrode (RE1) installed over
the line.
K(d, s)
function depending on the pipe depth (d) and the distance (s) between the
two reference electrodes used to measure the gradient. For a pipeline 1.2 metres
deep where d = 3 metres K = 1.59, for 5 metres K = 1, for 10 metres K = 0.5
Conclusion
A DCVG survey does not provide any information on the level of cathodic protection,
only information on the integrity of the coating. Repairing coating defects is a double
edged sword. As the number of defects is reduced, the surface area of steel from
which AC current can discharge is also reduced; thus the current density discharging
from the pipeline at any given location is increased and could result in corrosion from
DC stray current or AC current discharge.
The corrosion engineer must have sufficient information on the level of cathodic polarization on the pipelines under his jurisdiction that he can assure management that the
cathodic protection systems are functioning and providing cathodic protection current
to all areas of the pipeline. To reach this level of confidence, the corrosion engineer
needs regular current-interrupted close interval potential surveys as they are the only
method that indicates the level of cathodic polarization on the pipelines. DCVG
surveys can not provide this information.
References
1)
2)
3)
4)
World Pipelines, Stray and Telluric Correction of CIPS data February 2010
Peter Nicholson Corrosion 2008 Paper 08123 Is Your Pipeline Corroding
Peter Nicholson NACE Northern Region 2008 Is Your Pipeline Corroding
World Pipelines, Combined CIPS & DCVG surveys for more accurate ECDA
Data November 2007 issue
5) Peter Nicholson Corrosion 2007 Paper 07181 Combined CIPS & DCVG for
more accurate data correlation
6) Peter Nicholson Corrosion 2007 Stray &Telluric Correction of CIPS Data Paper
07182
7) Peter Nicholson External Corrosion Direct Assessment, Pipeline Rehabilitation
& Maintenance September 2006 Istanbul Turkey
8) Gummow, Seagal, Reid Corrosion 2006 Paper 06193 Use of an Integrated
CIPS/DCVG Survey in the ECDA Process
9) 23rd. World Gas Conference Amsterdam 2006 C.P. data, CIPS & DCVG techniques: another way to predict Corrosion on Gas Pipeline. A Taberkokt,
Algeria
10) Peter Nicholson External Corrosion Direct Assessment, Corcon 2004 New
Delhi India
11) Peter Nicholson Pipeline Integrity, World Pipelines, March 2003
12) Peter Nicholson Stray and Telluric Current Correction of Close Interval Potential Survey Data, Eurocorr 2003 Budapest Hungary
13) R.L. Pawson: "Close Interval Potential Surveys - Planning, Execution, Results",
Materials Performance, February 1998, pp.16-21.
14) N.G. Thompson and K.M. Lawson, PRCI PR-186-807 Improved Pipe-to-Soil Potential Survey Methods, April 1991
15) Cathodic Protection, Roger Alexander 1982 Early Practitioner of DCVG
16) Tagg, G.F. Earth Resistances. George Newnes Ltd, London. 1964
17) NACE International Recommended Practice SP0502-2007
18) NACE International Recommended Practice SP0507-2007
19) NACE International Standard Practice SP0169-2007
20) NACE International Standard Practice SP0207-2007
21) NACE TM0109-2009 Test Method Aboveground Survey Techniques for the
Evaluation of Underground Pipeline Coating Condition
22) US Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration Publication, Corrosion Cost and Preventative Strategies in the United States Published 2002