The present invention relates to a method of laying a pipeline in the bed of a body of water.
More specifically, the method according to the present invention is of the type which comprises advancing a digging assembly along a pipeline laid along a path on the bed of the body of water; and digging a trench along the path in the bed of the body of water by means of the digging assembly, so a portion of the pipeline settles onto the bottom of the trench, substantially as described in the Applicant's Patent Application WO 2005/005736 A2.
The pipeline portion laid on the bottom of the trench does not always conform with project specifications, and, more specifically, varies in depth independently of variations in the depth of the bed of the body of water. This is a potentially serious problem that may result in severe mechanical stress when the pipeline is subjected to in-service temperature variations caused by weather or the fluid flowing along it.
Variations in the depth of the pipeline also result in shallow coverage and, hence, poor protection of the pipeline against scouring.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a method of laying a pipeline in the bed of a body of water, designed to eliminate the drawbacks of the known art.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a method of laying a pipeline in the bed of a body of water, designed to ensure precise conformance with design parameters.
According to the present invention, there is provided a method of laying a pipeline in the bed of a body of water, the method comprising the steps of:
According to the present invention, the data relating to the bathymetric profile of the pipeline portion laid on the bottom of the trench is acquired by the digging assembly itself, so fast, effective action can be taken by the digging assembly operators to correct the bottom of the trench in the event of anomalies or unacceptable deviations in the bathymetric profile with respect to project parameters.
More specifically, the data-acquiring step comprises acquiring, by means of the digging assembly, position coordinates and depth coordinates of the pipeline portion laid on the bottom of the trench; the depth coordinates preferably indicating the depth of the top of the pipeline.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the data-acquiring step comprises interpolating the points identified by the position and depth coordinates into a curve, to define the bathymetric profile of the pipeline portion laid on the bottom of the trench; determining relative extremes of the curve; and calculating the variation in depth and the distance between each two consecutive relative extremes.
In another preferred embodiment, the method comprises acquiring position coordinates and depth coordinates of the bed of the body of water, to determine the bathymetric profile of the bed along the path; and calculating the coverage height of the pipeline portion laid on the bottom of the trench from the difference between the bathymetric profile of the bed along the path, and the bathymetric profile of the pipeline portion laid on the bottom of the trench. When filling in the trench, it is thus possible to monitor any anomalies in both the bathymetric profile and coverage height of the pipeline portion laid on the bottom of the trench, thus enabling operators to rectify both types of anomaly.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a digging assembly designed to eliminate the drawbacks of the known art.
According to the present invention, there is provided a digging assembly for laying a pipeline in the bed of a body of water, the digging assembly being advanced along a path defined by a pipeline laid on the bed of a body of water, and comprising at least one digging machine for digging a trench along the path in the bed of the body of water, so a portion of pipeline settles onto the bottom of the trench; and a control device designed to acquire data related to the bathymetric profile of the portion of pipeline laid on the bottom of the trench; to compare the acquired data with a set of permissible values; and to emit an error signal when the acquired data does not fall within the set of permissible values.
A non-limiting embodiment of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
The following description refers specifically to digging assembly 1 operated in post-trenching mode, i.e. in which a trench 5 is dug close to pipeline 2 laid beforehand along a path P on bed 3 of body of water 4.
Pipeline 2 extends along path P on bed 3 of body of water 4, and digging assembly 1 is advanced along path P in a direction D parallel to path P and close to pipeline 2.
Digging assembly 1 comprises a support base 6 which, in the example shown, is a powered vessel moved in steps in direction D, parallel to path P; digging devices 7, 8, 9, 10 for forming trench 5; at least one backfill device 12 for filling in trench 5; a control device 13; and at least one grader 14 for modifying the bottom of trench 5 when control device 13 detects any anomalies, attributable to the bottom of trench 5, in the position of the portion of pipeline 2 laid on the bottom of trench 5.
Support base 6 is equipped with a pump assembly PA connected to digging devices 8, 10, 11—which, in the example shown, are dredging devices—and to backfill device 12 to pump the material removed from trench 5 onto support base 6 and to backfill device 12, which fills in trench 5 once pipeline 2 is laid on the bottom of trench 5.
In the
Trench 5 is dug beneath pipeline 2 laid on bed 3 of body of water 4; and pipeline 2 settles gradually onto the bottom of trench 5 as it is dug. In the
The length of the unsupported portion depends on the physical, mechanical, and dimensional characteristics of pipeline 2, and on the depth of trench 5. And, on the basis of these parameters, it is possible to determine the point at which pipeline 2 rests on the bottom of trench 5.
Digging device 11 comprises a carriage 17 which is movable along pipeline 2, is located along the unsupported portion of pipeline 2, and is substantially a dredging device connected to the pump assembly PA on support base 6. Digging device 11 is also connected to support base 6 by an umbilical (not shown), is allowed a limited amount of movement along path P with respect to support base 6, and is an emergency dredging device, which is operated to remove collapsed sidewall material from the bottom of trench 5 and restore the bottom of trench 5 to design conditions. This is a routine occurrence when working with a loose bed 3 of body of water 4 and a steep-sidewalled trench 5.
Control device 13 comprises a control unit 18 on support base 6; and sensors 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25 connected functionally to control unit 18, and which are substantially pressure sensors for supplying signals to control unit 18. In the example shown, sensor 19 is fitted to digging machine 15; sensor 20 to digging machine 16; sensor 21 to carriage 17 of emergency digging device 11; sensor 22 to a carriage 26 movable along the portion of pipeline 2 laid on the bottom of trench 5; sensors 23, 24 to respective slides 27, 28 on bed 3 of body of water 4; and sensor 25 to support base 6. Control device 13 comprises a position recognition system 29—in the example shown, a GPS—for acquiring data related to the position coordinates of digging assembly 1. Position recognition system 29 and control unit 18 are configured to supply a position coordinate X indicating the distance travelled by digging assembly 1 along path P with respect to a reference point on pipeline 2—normally the trench backfill start point. Given that the component parts of digging assembly 1 are advanced more or less in the same way as and simultaneously with support base 6, the X coordinate also roughly indicates the position of each of the component parts of digging assembly 1.
Sensor 25 on the support base serves to determine atmospheric pressure by which to calibrate the other sensors. Sensors 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 34 supply pressure data related to the respective depths of digging machine 15, digging machine 16, digging device 11, carriage 26, and slides 27 and 28, to enable control unit 18 to supply respective depth values of digging machine 15, digging machine 16, digging device 11, carriage 26, and slides 27, 28 for each X position coordinate.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, control device 13 operates more accurately by acquiring the coordinate of digging machine 15, the coordinate of digging machine 16, the coordinate of digging device 11, the coordinate of carriage 26, and the coordinates of slides 27 and 28. Given the X position coordinate of support base 6, the above coordinates are relatively easy to acquire by simply adding (or subtracting) a fixed distance of each of the above components to (or from) the X position coordinate value. The positions of digging machines 15 and 16, emergency digging device 11, carriage 26 and slides 27 and 28, in fact, only vary by a few meters in direction D with respect to support base 6, so for this purpose may be considered fixed relative positions. This is a feasible approximation, considering that known position recognition systems are only accurate to within a few meters, and only a few types provide for greater precision, but at considerable cost. Nevertheless, in a variation not shown, control device 13 comprises a position recognition system for carriage 26, and position recognition devices for slides 27 and 28. In another variation not shown, each digging machine 15, 16 has its own position recognition device.
Control device 13 uses the data it acquires to calculate the straightness of pipeline 2 laid on the bottom of trench 5, or the extent to which arching of pipeline 2 is acceptable; the coverage height of pipeline 2; the operating depth of digging machines 15 and 16; and the depth of digging machine 11.
The above parameters serve to rectify any anomalies detected by control device 13.
Straightness Control of the Pipeline Laid on the Bottom of the Trench
When pipeline 2, or a portion of it, is laid on the bottom of trench 5, the pipeline assumes a bathymetric profile which depends on the bottom of trench 5 and the mechanical characteristics of pipeline 2. Straightness control ensures pipeline 2, or rather the portion of it, laid on the bottom of trench 5 has no critical points along its bathymetric profile capable of initiating abnormal deformation which could undermine the structural integrity of pipeline 2 once it is operative. For this purpose, pairs of permissible geometric values of pipeline 2 are defined, each pair comprising a permissible variation in depth of pipeline 2, and a permissible length of deformation along pipeline 2.
Arching—in this case, in the vertical plane of the pipeline—is considered a critical form of deformation, by possibly causing structural instability of the pipeline. An arching model is shown in
With reference to
With reference to
Control unit 18 is configured to acquire the relative extremes of the curve; calculate the variation in depth H, and distance L between each pair of consecutive relative extremes; and compare the pairs of H and L values with the pairs of permissible values in
Control unit 18 is configured to real-time calculate the H and L data relative to the last relative extreme, and the last acquired position and depth coordinates X1 and H1, which may identify a relative extreme and so indicate a critical condition of pipeline 2.
When the acquired H and L data does not fall within the permissible values in
The availability of a real-time error signal E1 indicating non-linearity of pipeline 2 enables immediate steps to be taken to level the bottom portion of trench 5 causing the non-linearity of pipeline 2, before trench 5 is filled in.
Error signal E1 determines an emergency situation, during which digging and backfilling may be suspended, support base 6 stopped in a given position, and the
Other devices, such as the one described in the Applicant's Patent Application WO 00/60178, may be substituted for grader 14.
Pipeline Coverage Height Control
With reference to
The bathymetric profile of bed 3 is substantially acquired along or close to path P (
Depth coordinate H1 is associated with a position coordinate X1, and depth coordinate H2 is associated with a position coordinate X2 defined by the distance, along path P, between slides 27, 28 and a reference point on pipeline 2 along path P. The subtraction of depth coordinates H1 and H2 must be made for respective position coordinate X1 and X2 values within a given confidence interval, i.e. relatively close and preferably coincident.
On the basis of error signal E2, grader 14 (
Emission of error signal E2 may also be followed by a signal to digging machines 15, 16 to correct, if necessary, the digging depth of machines 15, 16 (
In other words, control unit 18 acquires the bathymetric profile of bed 3, and compares it with the bathymetric profile of the portion of pipeline 2 laid on the bottom of trench 5, to ensure coverage height R falls within permissible values along the whole of path P.
Digging Machine Depth Control
With reference to
The same also applies to calculating the position coordinates along path P and the depth coordinates of emergency digging device 11, which is located along, and supplies information about flexure of, the unsupported portion of pipeline 2.
Digging assembly 1 according to the present invention provides for monitoring various parameters, and for making any necessary corrections when the monitored parameters fail to conform with design specifications.
Fast detection of any anomalies with respect to design parameters enables resetting of digging assembly 1 to prevent the anomalies from being repeated, and immediate action to eliminate the causes.
As such, digging assembly 1 provides for laying pipeline 2 in bed 3 of body of water 4 with a sufficient degree of straightness and sufficient coverage height R.
Clearly, changes may be made to the embodiment of the present invention as described herein without, however, departing from the protective scope of the accompanying Claims.
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MI2009A2044 | Nov 2009 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2010/002954 | 11/18/2010 | WO | 00 | 7/30/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2011/061605 | 5/26/2011 | WO | A |
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