1. Technical Field
The invention includes embodiments that relate to a method for monitoring and estimating surface corrosion. The invention includes embodiments that relate to an apparatus for monitoring and estimating surface corrosion. The invention includes embodiments that relate to a system for monitoring and estimating surface corrosion.
2. Discussion of Art
A corrosion monitoring apparatus is useful in an industrial system having corrodable parts. Because corrosion is generally undesirable, corrosion prevention methods may be used. One corrosion prevention method involves the addition of a corrosion inhibitor into a corrosive fluid that contacts a corrodible part. In a cooling system, for example, chemical corrosion inhibitor dosages may suppress corrosion. There is some range between a safe minimum dosage level and an actual minimum dosage level. If a real-time corrosion monitoring apparatus is available, the inhibitor feed rate would be continuously adjusted according to a real-time corrosion monitoring feedback to move the actual dosage rate closer to the lower actual minimum dosage rate.
Existing methods for corrosion detection include: corrosion coupons, electrical resistance (ER), inductive resistance (IR), linear polarization resistance (LPR), electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), Harmonic Analysis, Electrochemical Noise (EN), Zero Resistance Ammetry (ZRA), potentiodynamic polarization, thin layer activation (TLA), electrical field signature method (EFSM), acoustic emission (AE), corrosion potential, hydrogen probes, and chemical analyses. ER and IR methods measure the electric property of a corrosion sample to estimate the amount of corrosion. Commercial sensor elements that utilized ER and IR methods may take the form of plates, tubes, or wires. The sensors sensitivity can be increased by a reduction in the elements thickness. However, the sensor element lifetime diminishes significantly as the sensor element's thickness is reduced. Other methods including EN, ZRA, potentiodynamic polarization, TLA, EFSM, AE, corrosion potential, hydrogen probes, and chemical analyses utilize indirect evidences to detect corrosion, which tend to be affected by factors other than corrosion.
It may be desirable to have an apparatus or system with properties and characteristics that differ from those properties of currently available apparatus or system. It may be desirable to have a corrosion detection or corrosion monitoring method that differs from those methods currently available.
In one embodiment, an article includes an electrically conductive corrodible element; a device that can inject electricity at a plurality of various operation frequencies into the corrodible element; and a measurement apparatus operable to measuring impedance of the electrically conductive corrodible element under the plurality of various operation frequencies.
In one embodiment, a method includes measuring impedances under various operation frequencies, wherein impedances measured under high frequencies reflect localized corrosion features and impedances measured under low frequencies reflect general corrosion features.
In one embodiment, a method includes monitoring localized and uniform corrosion on an electrically conductive corrodible surface by: determining a finite-element-model (FEM) for relationship between corrosion and impedance profile over a frequency range; injecting electricity at a plurality of operation frequencies into the corrodible surface; measuring the respective impedance of the injected electricity at each of the plurality of operation frequencies to form an impedance profile of the corrodible surface; and comparing a change in the impedance profile from the FEM model estimating localized and uniform corrosion.
The invention includes embodiments that relate to a method for monitoring and estimating surface corrosion. The invention includes embodiments that relate to an apparatus for monitoring and estimating surface corrosion. The invention includes embodiments that relate to a system for monitoring and estimating surface corrosion.
As used herein, the terms “may” and “may be” indicate a possibility of an occurrence within a set of circumstances; a possession of a specified property, characteristic or function; and/or qualify another verb by expressing one or more of an ability, capability, or possibility associated with the qualified verb. Accordingly, usage of “may” and “may be” indicates that a modified term is apparently appropriate, capable, or suitable for an indicated capacity, function, or usage, while taking into account that in some circumstances the modified term may sometimes not be appropriate, capable, or suitable.
General (or uniform) corrosion refers to the relatively uniform reduction of thickness over the surface of a corroding material. General corrosion damages and removes metal mass, which changes the geometry, i.e., thickness of the surface, and causes a degradation or depletion of original material. General corrosion compromises the structural rigidity and integrity of a pipe or vessel. On the other hand, localized corrosion refers to that is widespread or limited to only a few areas of the target system, but is relatively non-uniform and occurs on a relatively small scale. Exemplary localized corrosion can include, but is not limited to, pitting, environmental stress cracking (ESC), (hydrogen) embrittlement, and the like, as well as combinations thereof.
Skin effect is a phenomenon that an alternating current (AC) flows mostly near an outer surface of a solid electrical conductor, such as a metal wire. At low frequencies, the current travels through an entire cross-section of the conductor. As the frequency increases, the current traveling through the conductor approximately concentrates in a peripheral sheet of thickness of the electrical conductor. The thickness (“skin depth δ” herein after) equation (equation 1-1) is:
wherein f is the transmission frequency of the AC current; ρ is “resistivity” which is only related to the material of the conductor; and μ is “permeability of vacuum”, which is a constant parameter, μ=3.192*10−8 weber/amp.in. Therefore, for one solid electrical conductor, the skin depth δ is only related to and scales as the square root of the operation frequency.
A detecting apparatus 100 is shown in
In certain embodiments, the coupon 1 is a strip made from copper with a rectangular cross section, which has a length of “a”, a width of “b”, and a height of “h”. In other embodiments, the cross section of the coupon 1 can also be in any of the shapes of a circular, an ellipse and etc. One exemplary coupon 1 is made from copper, with a size of a=50 mm, b=10 mm, and h=1 mm.
In one embodiment, the measurement apparatus for real-time measurement of impedances Z of the coupon 1 is a four-wire measurement system. As shown in
The impedance Z of the coupon 1 is subject to the following equation (equation 1-2):
Wherein R is circuit resistance, Ls is circuit inductance, Cs is circuit capacitance, and ω is angular frequency.
Impedance Z is a measurement of opposition of a conductor to the AC currents, which includes resistance R and reactance. Resistance R is due to electrons in a conductor colliding with the ionic lattice of the conductor and means that electrical energy is converted into heat. Different materials have different resistaivities. Reactance, however, is a measurement of the opposition to AC electricity due to capacitance Cs and inductance Ls which varie with frequency. Practically, size of the coupon 1 is much smaller than wavelength of the current from the power device 101, and thus inductacne Ls and capacitance Cs have very little effect to the impedance Z. In the following analysis and description, impact of the inductance and capacitance to the impedance is ignored, and resistance R is deemed substantially the same as the impedance Z.
By way of example, consider the coupon 1 has continuous general corrosion with loss to the height h, and a localized pitting 104 occurs in the upper surface 109 of the coupon 1. Methods of real-time detection of the general corrosion and the pitting 104, by the detecting apparatus 100, are discussed in detail below.
As discussed, due to the skin effect phenomenon, at high AC frequencies, the current skin depth δ decays as an electromagnetic wave attempts to penetrate the metal. Thus, only the skin portion of the coupon 1 (that has been penetrated by the current) actually contributes to the impedance and the observed impedance is frequently referred to as the “AC impedance” of the coupon 1.
While the current flow surface region defined by the skin effect produced at a given frequency is bounded by an decaying surface, the AC impedance may be reasonably computed by assuming that the total current in the conductor is uniformly distributed over a thickness of one skin depth. This simplification of sequestered sample volume geometry, as provided by equation 1.1, facilitates calculation of the AC impedance within the skin depth region at a given frequency, and was employed with the detecting apparatus 100 and method of the present invention.
Referring to
wherein ρ is the material electrical resistivity, L is the wire length a of the coupon, and S is the cross section penetrated by the current and defined by the skin depth δ. Therefore, at low frequencies, L is substantially the same with the length a of the coupon 1, and S is the total cross section of the coupon 1, i.e. S=b*h. Thus, AC resistance R of the coupon 1 is substantially constant under low operation frequencies.
As the operation frequency increases, when the skin depth is less than half of the height h, the corresponding frequency is called “first critical frequency f0”, the coupon 1 may be considered as a thin hollow conducting tube of length “a” and a wall thickness “δ”, as shown in
wherein the effective cross section S of the AC current is smaller than the total cross section of the coupon 1. Thus the resistance R (impedance Z) of coupon 1 has a sharp increase at the first critical frequency f0, as shown in
Therefore, a general corrosion of the coupon 1 can be detected by measuring real-time impedances of the coupon 1 under increasing operation frequencies, and the measured impedances are shaped into an impedance profile. On the impedance profile, where there is a sharp increase of the impedance, the corresponding frequency is the first critical frequency f0, where the skin depth δ is substantially the same as half of the height h of the coupon 1. Then the skin depth δ, i.e. half of the height h of the coupon, can be calculated by equation 1-1.
In certain embodiments, a second derivative of the impedence profile according to equation 1-3 may be used for prediction of the presence of the sharp increase of the impedance profile of
As shown in
According to the standard equation for wire resistance (equation 1-2), once the skin depth δ is more than half of the height h of the coupon 1, as the frequency increases further, the effective cross section of the coupon 1 is less, but the effective lengh L has substantially no changes. Therefore the resistance (impedance) of the coupon 1 is only related to the skin depth, which is determined by the operation frequencies. The pitting 104 has little effect to the AC resistance (impedance). When the skin depth is approaching depth r of the pitting 104 (hereinafter pitting depth r), the AC current flows through a convex path around the pitting 104 as shown in
In fact, when the skin depth is close to the pitting depth r, the AC current has already flowed through the convex bottom portion of the pitting 104 and affect changes of the AC impedance. Therefore, it is to be understandable that the pitting depth r is not identical to δ, but the error therebetween is acceptable in real detection of surface corrosion. Moreover, since the skin depth δ measured by this simplified method is greater than the real pitting depth r, it is advantageous to detect the pitting much earlier.
Accurate corrosion depth of the pitting 104 can be calculated by using a Finite-Element-Model (FEM) method, according to the relationship between the AC impedance of the coupon 1 and the increasing frequencies. Examples of commercially available FEM software include ANSYS®, available from Swanson Analysis Systems, Inc., ADINA®, available from R & D, Inc., and ABAQUS®, available from Hibbitt, Karisson, & Sorenson, Inc.
In certain embodiments, the power device 101 sends increasing frequencies, in a linear or logarithmic manner, to the coupon 1 for detecting the general corrosion and localized corrosion. The low frequencies of the increasing frequencies reflect general corrosion features, and the high frequencies of the increasing frequencies reflect localized corrosion features. The increasing frequencies are selected according to material and the height h of the corrodible conductive element. In certain embodiments, the skin depth δ at a lowest frequency is higher than half of the height h of the coupon 1, while the skin depth δ at a highest frequency is smaller than tenth of the height h of the coupon 1. In certain embodiments, the power device continuously and repeatedly sends the increasing frequencies to the coupon 1. In alternate embodiments, the power device 101 repeatedly sends the increasing frequencies to the coupon 1 for a preset time, for example 10 seconds, then stops for processing and estimating the general and localized corrosion features.
The embodiments described herein are examples of articles, systems and methods having elements corresponding to the elements of the invention recited in the claims. This written description may enable those of ordinary skill in the art to make and use embodiments having alternative elements that likewise correspond to the elements of the invention recited in the claims. The scope of the invention thus includes articles, systems and methods that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, and further includes other articles, systems and methods with insubstantial differences from the literal language of the claims. While only certain features and embodiments have been illustrated and described herein, many modifications and changes may occur to one of ordinary skill in the relevant art. The appended claims cover all such modifications and changes.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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200710164131.3 | Sep 2007 | CN | national |