The present invention relates generally to providing water impenetrable outer cladding, and to methods of installing such cladding, to outer pipeline coatings to better protect of joint infill coatings applied to exposed ends of coated pipeline to be laid in bodies of water.
It is conventional in the offshore pipeline industry to use weighted coated pipe on pipelines which are being laid on or under the floors of bodies of water. Originally, the weight coatings of each section or length of pipe were of concrete with end metal portions of the pipe left bare or unprotected. The end portions of adjacent lengths of pipe were welded together on a pipe laying barge as the pipeline was being formed. The bare metal was then covered with a film or sheet of corrosion resistant material. A joint infill resulting from injection of chemicals which reacted and formed an open cell polyurethane foam was then used to fill the annular socket or space between weight coatings. U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,900,195 and 6,402,201, each commonly owned by the assignee of the present application, are examples of this open cell foam infill technology.
More recently, the pipe lengths have been weight coated with a solid synthetic resin, usually being polypropylene and polyethylene synthetic resin coatings to serve as thermal insulation. This has been increasingly the case as offshore production has moved into deeper portions of bodies of water. In some cases a concrete weight coating has been applied on top of the synthetic resin insulation. A similar solid synthetic resin was also desired for the joint infill material. Solid synthetic resins are impenetrable by water; however, concerns have been raised about water ingress through even the relatively small spaces or gaps between the joint infill and the synthetic resin insulation coatings. This has been a particular concern due to the increased hydrostatic pressures beneath bodies of water, particularly in deeper bodies of water.
Other patents, such as U.S. Pat. No. 6,059,319, were directed to forming a cylindrical sleeve seal over the gap between adjacent lengths of plastic coated pipe. Filler panels of butyl rubber, bitumastic, rubberized bitumen or similar materials of a size approximating the interior space within the cylindrical sleeve were used in an attempt to provide corrosion protection. However, gaps and spaces were often present between the various elements, such as between the filler panel material, the pipe coating and the cylindrical sleeve seal. There was thus a risk of fluid leakage and corrosion. For offshore pipelines, particularly in deeper bodies of water, the hydrostatic pressures increased the concerns of fluid leakage through these gaps and spaces and resulting possible corrosion.
Briefly, the present invention provides a new and improved method of applying a protective outer cladding welded to the factory synthetic resin coatings over end portions of adjacent coated sections of pipe for a pipeline. A sheet of synthetic resin with an electrically conductive element about at least three sides is applied to form a cylindrical sleeve about the welded end portion. The electrically conductive element is connected to a source of electrical current. Chemical components are introduced into the interior of the cylindrical sleeve to allow a synthetic resin to form and fill the interior of the sleeve as joint infill insulation between the adjacent pipe sections. Electrical current is then sent into the electrically conductive element to heat adjacent portions of the cylindrical sleeve to bond the sheet together with the weight coating and to seal the sleeve over the joint infill coating. The present invention also provides a new and improved protective shield over joint infill on coated pipe sections for a pipeline. The coated sections may include insulation coating and weight coating.
The synthetic resin portions of the pipeline in a preferred embodiment are coated with a synthetic resin weight coating, and the synthetic resin formed during the step of introducing components is preferably a solid polyurethane which bonds with the synthetic resin coating along the length of the pipe.
To better understand the characteristics of the invention, the description herein is attached, as an integral part of the same, with drawings to illustrate, but not limited to that, described as follows.
A better understanding of the present invention can be obtained when the detailed description set forth below is reviewed in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
To better understand the invention, a detailed description of some of the modalities, as shown in the drawings for illustrative but not limiting purposes, is included as part of the description herein.
Although the following detailed description contains many specific details for purposes of illustration, anyone of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that many variations and alterations to the following details are within the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the exemplary embodiment of the invention described below is set forth without any loss of generality to, and without imposing limitations thereon, the claimed invention.
In the drawings,
According to the present invention, sheet S is wrapped about the pipeline P form a cylindrical sleeve C (
As is conventional, the end portions 10 and 12 of the pipe sections 16 and 17 are welded together to form the weld joint 18. The exposed end or stub portions 10 and 12 of the pipe sections 16 and 17, respectively, in the area of the gap G are not weight coated prior to the welding of sections 10 and 12 together. If desired, a thin corrosion protective coating may be installed over the end portions 10 and 12 after the weld joint 18 is formed and the weld area and end portions cleaned.
As will be set forth below, the sheet S is formed into the cylindrical sleeve C, and then an annulus or cylindrical space 24 is formed about the exposed pipe sections 10 and 12 adjacent the weld joint 18. The annulus 24 is preferably filled such as by pouring, injection or the like with a chemical composition such as a suitable synthetic resin, in the form of a polyurethane or epoxy which sets or hardens in the annulus to form a HDPE or other hard synthetic resin infill I. As an alternative, chemical components which mix and then harden to form a hard polyurethane or epoxy joint infill I for insulation may be injected into the annulus 24. The composition or components which form the joint infill I also bond with the adjacent weight coatings 14 and 15 of the pipeline P and also with synthetic resin interior surface portions 30 of the sleeve S. Due to such bonding, no flow path for water ingress is formed between the end portions 10 and 12 adjacent weld joint in the pipeline P.
As shown in
The welding element 28 in response to the flow of electrical current heats and melts the adjacent synthetic resin materials. The heated, melted synthetic resin bonds overlapping or adjacent portions of the cylindrical sleeve C together and also to the weight coatings 16 and 17. End portions 30a and 30c of the sleeve C are disposed circumferentially. When the sleeve S is formed into the cylindrical sleeve C and heated by welding element 28, the end or edge portions 30a and 30c provide circumferential bonding together of the coiled cylindrical portions of the sheet S at each end of the annulus 24. The circumferential end portions 30a and 30c also bond the sleeve S circumferentially to the coated portions 16 and 17, respectively.
A central portion 28c of the conductive heat strip 28 adjacent the edge 30b of the sleeve C forms a longitudinal seal L along an area of longitudinal overlap along edge portion 30b. The circumferential seals L are formed between the sleeve S and the weight coated portions 16 and 17 at each end of the gap G. The longitudinal seal L formed in the sleeve S extends between the circumferential seals to seal the gap G.
Electrical conductive contacts or leads 32 and 34 are installed or attached to connect the conductive strip or band 28 to a power supply P (
The end portions 28d and 28e are located when the cylindrical sleeve C is formed, on opposite sides of the annulus 24, with the longitudinal portion 28c of the U-shape extending longitudinally between adjacent overlapping portions of the cylindrical sleeve C. In this manner, the synthetic resin bond or weld formed when element 28 heats due to electrical current flow is one continuous synthetic resin bond from one end to the other end of the sleeve C. The bond so formed is located circumferentially at end portions 28d and 28e connected around two corners 28a and 28b to form the longitudinal weld
Sizes of the sleeve C can vary to accommodate pipe sizes for example, 2″ thru 60″ diameters. The sleeve C in most cases is preferably pre-abraded on the inside surface 30. If desired, it may be factory corona-treated, or treated in the field by means of flame treatment, or both, to enhance the bond at the interface of the inside of the sleeve C with the solid polyurethane infill I that is formed in the annulus 24.
A solid polyurethane-forming material 55 is pumped or poured into the annulus 24 with a hose and nozzle 58 until the volume of the annulus 24 is full. The solid polyurethane material 55 quickly reacts and changes state from liquid to solid, hardening and forming the fluid impenetrable joint infill I. In most cases the polyurethane material 55 used has no expansion on exposure to air. However, in some cases the infill material 55 may be of a lower density that does expand somewhat. The polyurethane materials used for this application may range in density from 2 to 80 pounds per cubic foot.
As shown in
An injection port closure 65 (
An electrical power supply in the form of welding transformer or power supply P is then connected to the leads 32 and 34 and thus the welding mesh 28. Connections are also made to the wire welding mesh 66 with the injection port patch 65. Preferably, a separate power transformer or supply is used to provide current to the wire mesh 66 of the injection port closure 65 from that supplying the welding mesh 28. A separate power transformer or supply is thus preferably provided for each weld to be formed in the sleeve C.
The power supply P is a programmable one having a control unit or panel P. In the preferred embodiment, the power supply is a variable output transformer having a programmable output voltage of from 0 to 240 volts, and current levels from 0 to 100 or more amperes for programmable dwell times. The power supply P can thus be set to provide different current levels at different rates of current increase for adjustable periods of time. The current supply levels, current application times durations and other power supply parameters are thus adjustable, based on the particular type and size of weld to be formed in the cover sleeve C.
The power supply P is a variable output transformer and timer box used to deliver the electrical current to welding element/mesh 28 creating resistance heat. This transformer can be programmed at its control panel P to suit a wide range of parameters including programmable amount of power, adjustable speed to reach that amount of power, and programmable time to hold that power before returning to zero power. If desired, a thermocouple may be used to monitor the welding temperature and speed of temperature increase.
After connection to the respective power supplies, current flow is then turned on to reach a pre-determined amount of electrical power to the welding mesh 28 and the mesh 66 and at a pre-determined speed of increase for a pre-determined period of time. The materials of the cylindrical sleeve C bond together along the circumferential seams R and the longitudinal seam L where heat was applied by the element 28. In the embodiment shown, the heated synthetic resin becomes clear on melting so that the element 28 becomes visible. The interior surface 30 of the sleeve also bonds to the exterior of the infill I, and the outer portions of the sleeve C bond with the coated end portions 14 and 15, as well.
According to the present invention, a permanent outer cladding is formed by bonding of the synthetic resin materials together in the manner described above. The sleeve 30 bonds to the infill I and also to the factory applied portions 16 and 17 of the pipeline P. The infill I also bonds to the factory coated the sleeve 30 also bonds to synthetic resin in the coated portions 16 and 17. The sleeve 30 also bonds to itself along the area of the longitudinal overlap along edge portion 30b.
The joint in the pipeline P so formed is thus impermeable to water and in effect a hermetic seal. The joint formed according to the present invention provides an effective, water impermeable seal to the factory applied pipeline coatings and affords better protection for both the joint infill insulation and the pipeline insulation coatings.
12 and 13 show a finished joint infill shield according to the present invention. As shown in
The invention has been sufficiently described so that a person with average knowledge in the matter may reproduce and obtain the results mentioned in the invention herein Nonetheless, any skilled person in the field of technique, subject of the invention herein, may carry out modifications not described in the request herein, to apply these modifications to a determined structure, or in the manufacturing process of the same, requires the claimed matter in the following claims; such structures shall be covered within the scope of the invention.
It should be noted and understood that there can be improvements and modifications made of the present invention described in detail above without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention as set forth in the accompanying claims.
The present application relates to joint infill cladding of pipeline joints, as does commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ entitled “Joint Infill Cladding Applicator Clamp” (Attorney Docket No. 085356.000023), filed of even date herewith, and of which applicant is inventor.