1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for managing corrosion of an underground structure, and in particular, it relates to a method for installing an anode to protect an underground metal pipeline.
2. Background Art
Corrosion, and in particular corrosion of metal structures, is a problem that must regularly be addressed in a wide variety of areas. For example, in the automotive industry, metal parts are often plated or coated to protect them from road salt and moisture in hopes of increasing their longevity. Indeed, many traditionally metal parts are currently being replaced with polymeric components, which are not only lighter and perhaps more cost effective to produce, but are generally impervious to electrochemical corrosion often experienced by metals.
Other industries have also employed non-metal structures, or at least coated metal structures. For example, new installations of natural gas delivery systems may include wrapped steel gas pipelines to help inhibit corrosion. These coated steel pipelines generally have a much longer expected life span than their bare steel counterparts; however, the coating on the wrapped steel pipelines will eventually degrade. Moreover, many hundreds or thousands of miles of pipeline were installed before wrapped steel pipe was readily available. Therefore, corrosion of existing pipeline structures—and eventually, corrosion of recently-laid wrapped pipeline structures—present an ongoing challenge for those working in the gas industry.
One way in which this problem has been addressed is through the use of cathodic protection for the steel pipelines. In its simplest form, cathodic protection includes the use of a galvanic couple—i.e., the metal to be protected is electrically connected to another metal that is more anodic than the metal to be protected. The anode becomes sacrificial, giving up electrons in an oxidation reaction. In this situation, the metal to be protected becomes a cathode, experiencing a reduction reaction which protects the metal.
In the case of an underground steel pipeline, it has been common practice to bury an anode rod in proximity to the pipeline, and connect the rod and the pipeline together with an electrical conductor, such as a copper wire. Because these pipelines may remain in the ground for decades, and because the anode can, over time, experience significant deterioration, it is important to be able to determine if a particular anode remains an effective corrosion inhibitor for the pipeline. One way this is accomplished is by terminating the connection between the anode and the pipeline in a test box, sometimes called a “curb box”. The test box is usually located near the surface of the ground, and has a top cover which can be removed to provide access to the interior of the box. In the box, a wire leading from the pipeline is attached to a wire leading from the anode. By placing a volt meter in between these wires and measuring the voltage potential, the relative effectiveness of the anode can be determined. When it is determined that an anode has deteriorated beyond the point at which it continues to be effective to inhibit corrosion of the steel pipeline, a new anode is required.
In practice, the existing anode may be allowed to remain, while a second anode is installed. Although the electrical connection to the pipeline is made inside the test box, installing the anode in the ground can be very expensive, time consuming, and disruptive. One particularly onerous aspect of installing a new anode to protect an underground pipeline is the cost of the relatively large excavation project that is used to place the new anode in the ground near the test box. Test boxes are sometimes located in sidewalks, or along the edges of busy thoroughfares. In cases such as these, it is common for a municipality to require the purchase of a permit to break through the concrete or asphalt surrounding the test box. In addition to the purchase price of the permit, it may be necessary for the construction company to post a bond. Drawings of the proposed excavation and placement of the anode may need to be submitted, and additional fees are often required.
The administrative costs for such a project in a large city, for example New York City, may total a thousand dollars or more. For a large utility, which may place hundreds of anodes along miles of pipeline each year, these costs represent a huge expense. In addition, there is the equipment required for the excavation project itself, which may include a jack hammer, or other impact device, and a backhoe, or other removal equipment, needed to dig the hole and remove the debris after the concrete or asphalt surface is penetrated. Such a project is not only expensive and time consuming for the company performing it, but is also disruptive to the public. A typical excavation to place an anode is loud, time consuming, and may cause traffic—pedestrian and/or vehicle traffic—to be rerouted, not only while the anode is being installed, but afterward during the time the newly-poured replacement concrete or asphalt sets-up.
Therefore, a need exists for a method for managing corrosion of an underground structure, and in particular a method for installing an anode for a steel pipeline that does not require destruction of a paved surface surrounding a test box, with all of its attendant costs and disruptions.
Accordingly, embodiments of the present invention include a method for managing corrosion of an underground structure that does not require the pavement surface to be penetrated in order to bury a sacrificial anode in the ground.
The invention also provides a method for managing corrosion of an underground structure that includes a pipeline having an electrically conductive apparatus electrically connected to it. At least a portion of the electrically conductive apparatus is disposed in a container at least partially disposed below ground. The container includes a wall and a removable cover for selectively covering and providing access to an interior of the container. The method includes removing the cover of the container and boring a hole through the wall of the container. The boring is initiated from the interior of the container. Material is removed from the ground proximate the container through the hole in the wall. This creates a hole of a certain depth in the ground adjacent the container without having to penetrate a top surface of the ground proximate the container. An anode for the pipeline is at least partially inserted into the hole of the certain depth from the interior of the container. This effects placement of the anode in the ground adjacent the container without having to penetrate a top surface of the ground proximate the container. The anode is then electrically connected to the electrically conductive apparatus.
The invention further provides a method for managing corrosion of an underground structure that includes a pipeline having a first anode electrically connected thereto. The pipeline has an electrical conductor electrically connected to it, at least a portion of which is disposed in a test box at least partially disposed below ground. The test box includes a wall and a removable cover for selectively covering and providing access to an interior of the test box. The method includes removing the cover of the test box and creating a hole of a certain depth in the ground adjacent the container by boring through the wall of the test box from its interior, and removing material from the ground proximate the test box through the bored hole. The hole of the certain depth is created without having to penetrate a top surface of the ground proximate the container. A second anode for the pipeline is at least partially disposed within the hole of the certain depth, and electrically connected to the electrical conductor.
The invention also provides a method for managing corrosion of an underground structure having a first electrically conductive apparatus electrically connected thereto. At least a portion of the first electrically conductive apparatus is disposed in a container that is at least partially below ground. The container has an interior which is at least partially defined by a wall. The method includes accessing the interior of the container, thereby providing access to the wall and the first electrically conductive apparatus. A hole is created in the wall of the container, thereby providing access to the ground proximate the container adjacent the hole in the wall. A hole of a certain depth is created in the ground adjacent the hole in the wall by accessing the ground through the hole in the wall from the interior of the container. This creates the hole of the certain depth without having to penetrate a top surface of the ground proximate the container. A second electrically conductive apparatus is at least partially disposed within the hole of the certain depth. The second electrically conductive apparatus includes a material capable of acting as an anode relative to the underground structure. The first and second electrically conductive apparatuses are electrically connected to each other.
The present invention provides considerable advantages over existing methods of installing an anode and attaching it to a steel pipeline. In the case of installing an anode for a pipeline where a previously installed anode is connected to the pipeline in a test box, the test box provides access to the subsurface ground where the new anode will be located. A test box such as this will often be located near an edge of a roadway, which may be asphalt or concrete. A top cover of the test box will usually be at or near ground level, and it will not be covered with the road surface material. Therefore, an interior portion of the test box can be accessed by removing the cover, which does not require penetration of the roadway surface.
By accessing subsurface ground through the interior of the test box, the present invention contemplates positioning an anode below ground without disrupting the surface of a surrounding roadway. In one embodiment, a core drill is used to bore through a side of the test box, the bottom of the test box, or some combination thereof. The core drill is then used to bore a hole through some of the roadway surrounding the test box. This provides access to the soil and other ground materials, which are removed by some effective method, such as digging or vacuuming. This provides a location for placement of an anode, such as a magnesium rod. An electrically conducting wire is secured to the top end of the rod, such that the wire can be connected to the pipeline—and also the first anode—by tapping into the existing connection in the test box.
The core drill may be angled as it bores through the side of the test box and the roadway surrounding the test box, such that it is not oriented horizontally or vertically. This provides a number of advantages. For example, depending on the diameter of the core drill used, and the location of the existing wires in the test box, drilling vertically through the floor of the test box may be difficult or impossible because of interference with the wires. Conversely, drilling horizontally through a sidewall of the test box would be difficult since the interior of the box itself may be relatively small, and the core drill relatively long.
In addition to other advantages, drilling through the test box at some oblique angle to the vertical, and creating a hole in the ground at approximately the same angle, allows the anode to be positioned in the hole with ample ground between the pipeline and the anode so that an acceptable voltage potential is developed between the pipeline and the anode. A voltage potential is necessary for the galvanic reactions to occur so that the pipeline is cathodically protected and the anode is sacrificed. In this way, the present invention provides for the placement of an anode to efficiently protect a steel pipeline, while avoiding the excessive time, cost and disruption associated with present techniques which require penetration of a road surface to place such an anode.
In the embodiment shown in
Also shown in phantom in
In addition to the other advantages, the present invention typically generates far less debris than conventional anode placement techniques. For example, the core drill 46 will penetrate the test box 20, and perhaps some of the pipe 27 extending down from the test box. In addition, as more clearly illustrated in
The hole bored in the test box 20 facilitates access to the ground proximate the test box 20, including an undersurface portion of the roadway 14 and the soil 12, without having to penetrate the top surface 16 of the roadway 14. Once the soil 12 is accessible, the soil material—i.e. dirt, sand, small rocks, etc.—can be removed by any technique effective to provide a location for placement of an anode, such as the anode 40 shown in
As shown in
After the core drill 46 penetrates the test box 20 and the roadway 14, material from the soil 12 is removed as describe above. This creates a hole 54 of a certain depth in the soil 12—see
Because the ability of the anode 40 to protect the pipeline 10 from corrosion is related to the surface area of the anode 40, it may be beneficial to use a relatively large rod, for example, a rod at least 24 inches long, and having a transverse dimension of at least 4 inches. Such a rod does not need to be perfectly square or round, but rather, can have a cross section represented by an irregular polygon. As noted above, once the anode 40 is placed in the hole 54, and the backfill is used to fill the open space 56, the wire 42 is connected to at least the wire 28 from the pipeline 10. The cover 18 is then replaced on the test box 20, and the entire process has been performed with a significant reduction in time, cost and environmental disturbance as compared to conventional anode installation techniques.
While embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, it is not intended that these embodiments illustrate and describe all possible forms of the invention. Rather, the words used in the specification are words of description rather than limitation, and it is understood that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
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