In situ corrosion monitoring of steam generators

1980 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 781-789 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin W. Kendig ◽  
Hugh S. Isaacs
2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Herb Estrada ◽  
Don Augenstein ◽  
Ernie Hauser

This is the second of two papers describing the traceability of nuclear feedwater flow measurements. The first considered the challenges and methodology for establishing the traceability of chordal ultrasonic flow meters. This paper considers the challenges of establishing the traceability in a measurement using a flow element of the modified venturi tube type. It specifically considers the assumptions and uncertainties associated with the extrapolation, for use in the field, of tube calibration factors measured in the laboratory. To quantify these uncertainties, the in-situ performance of four modified venturi tubes is compared with the performance of four 8-path chordal ultrasonic flowmeters. The data analyzed were collected in the feeds of four steam generators in a large pressurized water reactor plant, each feed containing one meter of each type. The meters were initially calibrated in this series arrangement in a NIST traceable calibration lab and then operated in the same arrangement in the field.


2019 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ricardo C. Jacques ◽  
Henrique H. de Oliveira ◽  
Rafael W. F. dos Santos ◽  
Thomas G. R. Clarke

Sensors ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 10400-10410 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinxin Fu ◽  
Junhua Dong ◽  
Enhou Han ◽  
Wei Ke

Author(s):  
E. Thomas Cook ◽  
Holger Lukas ◽  
Donald Elmore ◽  
Wai Yeung Mok ◽  
Bhupen Mehta

Cold-end sulfuric-acid corrosion is a phenomenon common in boilers and heat recovery steam generators. Usually, operating conditions can be changed to reduce or eliminate corrosion. The operation of an on-line continuous corrosion probe in a test-rig and correlation with physical corrosion measurements is reported. Description of the development of a full-scale recuperator corrosion probe is presented as well as preliminary results.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (19) ◽  
pp. 6334
Author(s):  
Tim Savill ◽  
Eifion Jewell

A review is carried out in this paper into techniques that currently exist for, of have the potential to be used for, monitoring the performance of organic coating. Specific attention is paid to the applicability of each method to pre-finished steel used in the construction industry as these are rarely monitored in situ and their expected performance is often only estimated from lab-based accelerated corrosion testing. Monitoring could allow more accurate estimates of building cladding lifespan and required maintenance schedules; provide customers with active performance data; additionally, with a better understanding of performance, more appropriate coatings or coating weights could be selected for a construction project, offering economic benefits as part of smart building developments. An introduction to coatings, their use for corrosion protection, failure mechanisms, and relevant monitoring techniques is given before current assessment techniques are described in terms of their working principles. Examples of recent work are presented for the techniques that have been investigated for monitoring or directly relatable purposes. The review concludes that there are several good reasons why an optimum corrosion monitoring technology does not currently exist, however, promising research is emerging in the field of wireless and embedded sensor design which is providing optimistic results.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junwen Dai ◽  
◽  
Ahmed E. Fouda ◽  

Monitoring the integrity of well casings is vital for oil and gas well management, which can help maintain production levels, reduce maintenance cost, and protect surrounding environment. An electromagnetic pipe inspection tool with multiple transmitter and receiver arrays operating at multiples frequencies was designed to accurately estimate the individual wall thicknesses of up to five nested pipes. Data acquired from this tool was originally processed based on an axis-symmetric forward model to invert for wall thicknesses of individual pipes. Such processing workflow is only applicable to a typical well completion with a single production tubing inside multiple nested casings. However, in a scenario with dual completions, two production tubings are generally installed to produce from more than one production zone. The presence of more than one tubing breaks the axial-symmetry of the completion structure. In this paper, we propose a new workflow to process data from electromagnetic tools for the application of integrity inspection of non-nested tubulars. A yard test with full-scale mockup demonstrates the performance of the tool. The proposed workflow, including data calibration and model-based inversion, can estimate the magnetic permeability and electrical conductivity of the pipes, along with wall thicknesses, and eccentricity of the tubings with respect to the innermost casing. An in-situ calibration method is applied to mitigate interference from one tubing when the tool is logged inside the other tubing. Model-based inversion enables an accurate estimation of the thickness of outer casings along with the eccentricity of the tubings. In addition, a two-dimensional inversion algorithm is shown to provide more accurate assessment of small corrosion spots. In the yard test, a 150 ft-long mockup includes two strings of 2⅞-in. tubings and two outer casings with four machined defects with different sizes. Logging inside each of the tubing strings was performed, and the two logs are processed to obtain the thicknesses of the tubings, outer casings as well as the eccentricity of the tubings. The inversion results reveal that the tool can accurately detect various kinds of defects on outer casings from one single log, even in the presence of a second tubing. The measurements show that the interference from the adjacent tubing is minimal and its impact on the inversion result can be well mitigated by employing the in-situ calibration. The consistent results from two logs run in each tubing string suggests that it is sufficient to run the tool in only one of the tubing strings, if the goal is solely to inspect corrosion in the outer casings. The techniques presented enable pipe integrity monitoring with a single run inside any one of the tubings and without pulling out any pipes. The data processing workflow based on two-dimensional inversion yields more accurate estimation, which provides critical information to significantly improve the efficiency of well intervention operations, therefore minimizing non-productive time and cost.


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