Effects of soil resistivity on currents induced on pipelines
The goal of cathodic protection is to prevent corrosion by maintaining buried pipelines at a constant potential with respect to the surrounding soil. In practice, however, the implementation is very complicated since many factors can contribute to the current flowing off the pipe. Design requires ch...
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Acceso en línea: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09269851_v44_n4_p303_Osella |
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todo:paper_09269851_v44_n4_p303_Osella |
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institution |
Universidad de Buenos Aires |
institution_str |
I-28 |
repository_str |
R-134 |
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Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA) |
topic |
Cathodic protection Corrosion in pipelines Telluric effects in pipelines Cathodic protection Electric conductivity of solids Geomagnetism Magnetic field effects Mathematical models Pipelines Telluric effects Soil mechanics corrosion control electric current pipeline protection corrosion electrical conductivity pipeline protection |
spellingShingle |
Cathodic protection Corrosion in pipelines Telluric effects in pipelines Cathodic protection Electric conductivity of solids Geomagnetism Magnetic field effects Mathematical models Pipelines Telluric effects Soil mechanics corrosion control electric current pipeline protection corrosion electrical conductivity pipeline protection Osella, A. Favetto, A. Effects of soil resistivity on currents induced on pipelines |
topic_facet |
Cathodic protection Corrosion in pipelines Telluric effects in pipelines Cathodic protection Electric conductivity of solids Geomagnetism Magnetic field effects Mathematical models Pipelines Telluric effects Soil mechanics corrosion control electric current pipeline protection corrosion electrical conductivity pipeline protection |
description |
The goal of cathodic protection is to prevent corrosion by maintaining buried pipelines at a constant potential with respect to the surrounding soil. In practice, however, the implementation is very complicated since many factors can contribute to the current flowing off the pipe. Design requires characterization of the parameters impacting the corrosion process, such as soil resistivity, size of the pipe and quality of the coating. In the present paper, we have studied the effect of geomagnetic fields on the pipe-induced currents considering it as an additional cause of corrosion. A theoretical method implemented to model the induced currents was tested in a previous work and the effect during disturbed days was quantified. This theoretical model indicated that the intensity of the current induced in a pipeline by the varying geomagnetic field depends on the intensity and rate of change of the field and the electrical resistivity of the soil. This induced current is in equilibrium with the host current and there is no current drainage between the pipeline and the host until, along the length of the pipeline, the host resistivity becomes different. At that point, current must flow between the pipe and host in order to establish a new equilibrium. It is this drainage current, flowing between the pipeline and the host, which causes corrosion problems. Following these results, experimental tests were performed in Tierra del Fuego. In this zone, a geophysical study was made to determine the discontinuities in soil resistivities and simultaneous measurements of the geomagnetic field and the drainage of current were recorded at different sites. The results obtained from the correlation of the data are consistent with the theoretical predictions. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. The goal of cathodic protection is to prevent corrosion by maintaining buried pipelines at a constant potential with respect to the surrounding soil. In practice, however, the implementation is very complicated since many factors can contribute to the current flowing off the pipe. Design requires characterization of the parameters impacting the corrosion process, such as soil resistivity, size of the pipe and quality of the coating. In the present paper, we have studied the effect of geomagnetic fields on the pipe-induced currents considering it as an additional cause of corrosion. A theoretical method implemented to model the induced currents was tested in a previous work and the effect during disturbed days was quantified. This theoretical model indicated that the intensity of the current induced in a pipeline by the varying geomagnetic field depends on the intensity and rate of change of the field and the electrical resistivity of the soil. This induced current is in equilibrium with the host current and there is no current drainage between the pipeline and the host until, along the length of the pipeline, the host resistivity becomes different. At that point, current must flow between the pipe and host in order to establish a new equilibrium. It is this drainage current, flowing between the pipeline and the host, which causes corrosion problems. Following these results, experimental tests were performed in Tierra del Fuego. In this zone, a geophysical study was made to determine the discontinuities in soil resistivities and simultaneous measurements of the geomagnetic field and the drainage of current were recorded at different sites. The results obtained from the correlation of the data are consistent with the theoretical predictions. |
format |
JOUR |
author |
Osella, A. Favetto, A. |
author_facet |
Osella, A. Favetto, A. |
author_sort |
Osella, A. |
title |
Effects of soil resistivity on currents induced on pipelines |
title_short |
Effects of soil resistivity on currents induced on pipelines |
title_full |
Effects of soil resistivity on currents induced on pipelines |
title_fullStr |
Effects of soil resistivity on currents induced on pipelines |
title_full_unstemmed |
Effects of soil resistivity on currents induced on pipelines |
title_sort |
effects of soil resistivity on currents induced on pipelines |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09269851_v44_n4_p303_Osella |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT osellaa effectsofsoilresistivityoncurrentsinducedonpipelines AT favettoa effectsofsoilresistivityoncurrentsinducedonpipelines |
_version_ |
1782026171554201600 |
spelling |
todo:paper_09269851_v44_n4_p303_Osella2023-10-03T15:46:48Z Effects of soil resistivity on currents induced on pipelines Osella, A. Favetto, A. Cathodic protection Corrosion in pipelines Telluric effects in pipelines Cathodic protection Electric conductivity of solids Geomagnetism Magnetic field effects Mathematical models Pipelines Telluric effects Soil mechanics corrosion control electric current pipeline protection corrosion electrical conductivity pipeline protection The goal of cathodic protection is to prevent corrosion by maintaining buried pipelines at a constant potential with respect to the surrounding soil. In practice, however, the implementation is very complicated since many factors can contribute to the current flowing off the pipe. Design requires characterization of the parameters impacting the corrosion process, such as soil resistivity, size of the pipe and quality of the coating. In the present paper, we have studied the effect of geomagnetic fields on the pipe-induced currents considering it as an additional cause of corrosion. A theoretical method implemented to model the induced currents was tested in a previous work and the effect during disturbed days was quantified. This theoretical model indicated that the intensity of the current induced in a pipeline by the varying geomagnetic field depends on the intensity and rate of change of the field and the electrical resistivity of the soil. This induced current is in equilibrium with the host current and there is no current drainage between the pipeline and the host until, along the length of the pipeline, the host resistivity becomes different. At that point, current must flow between the pipe and host in order to establish a new equilibrium. It is this drainage current, flowing between the pipeline and the host, which causes corrosion problems. Following these results, experimental tests were performed in Tierra del Fuego. In this zone, a geophysical study was made to determine the discontinuities in soil resistivities and simultaneous measurements of the geomagnetic field and the drainage of current were recorded at different sites. The results obtained from the correlation of the data are consistent with the theoretical predictions. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. The goal of cathodic protection is to prevent corrosion by maintaining buried pipelines at a constant potential with respect to the surrounding soil. In practice, however, the implementation is very complicated since many factors can contribute to the current flowing off the pipe. Design requires characterization of the parameters impacting the corrosion process, such as soil resistivity, size of the pipe and quality of the coating. In the present paper, we have studied the effect of geomagnetic fields on the pipe-induced currents considering it as an additional cause of corrosion. A theoretical method implemented to model the induced currents was tested in a previous work and the effect during disturbed days was quantified. This theoretical model indicated that the intensity of the current induced in a pipeline by the varying geomagnetic field depends on the intensity and rate of change of the field and the electrical resistivity of the soil. This induced current is in equilibrium with the host current and there is no current drainage between the pipeline and the host until, along the length of the pipeline, the host resistivity becomes different. At that point, current must flow between the pipe and host in order to establish a new equilibrium. It is this drainage current, flowing between the pipeline and the host, which causes corrosion problems. Following these results, experimental tests were performed in Tierra del Fuego. In this zone, a geophysical study was made to determine the discontinuities in soil resistivities and simultaneous measurements of the geomagnetic field and the drainage of current were recorded at different sites. The results obtained from the correlation of the data are consistent with the theoretical predictions. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09269851_v44_n4_p303_Osella |