The present invention relates generally to an apparatus and method for installing a monitoring cable proximate an in-situ pipeline.
The present invention is directed to an apparatus for installing a line along a length of buried pipeline. The apparatus comprises a machine frame, a plow, a first proximity sensor, and a second proximity sensor. The machine frame comprises at least one ground engaging drive member, and defines a first and second end and longitudinal centerline. The plow is disposed on the second end of the frame. The first and second proximity sensors are longitudinally spaced and both capable of detecting a magnetic field emanating from the buried pipeline.
The present invention is further directed to a method. The method comprises inducing an electromagnetic signal on a length of buried pipeline and translating a mobile machine along the length of the buried pipeline. The magnetic signal is detected at the mobile machine frame as it translates along the length of pipeline. The signal is used to maintain the machine frame along a path a desired distance range away from the buried pipeline. The method further comprises opening a trench along the path as the machine frame is translated along the length of the pipeline and installing a line within the trench.
The invention is further directed to a system comprising a pipeline, a monitoring line, and a processor. The monitoring line is disposed at a distance of less than ten feet from the pipeline and carries a signal along its length. The processor is in communication with the monitoring line and detects interruptions or abnormalities in the signal. The monitoring line and pipeline are at least partially underground. At the onset of the second residence time, the pipeline contains a flowing material.
Pipelines transmit a flowing material, such as water, crude oil or natural gas, from one location to a distant location. Such pipelines must be monitored to detect leaks, nearby digging activity, and the like. Pressurized liquid or gas may rapidly expand from any breach of the pipeline. Leaks could cause environmental damage and loss of valuable product, and could lead to safety hazards. Any digging activity that does not take particular care to avoid the pipe risks causing the same hazards.
In recent years, monitoring systems have been developed to remotely monitor a condition of the pipeline, which may include leaks and nearby digging. For example, fiber optic cable or other sensor lines, laid along the length of a pipeline, carry a signal between spaced nodes. When the signal is interrupted or distorted, software interprets that disruption to determine the nature and location of a hazard. Such real-time monitoring can allow quick mitigation of the hazard.
While new installations of pipelines allow for easy installation of such monitoring lines during the installation process, many thousands of miles of such pipelines exist without monitors. The present invention provides a way to install monitors, such as fiber-optic monitoring lines, next to pre-existing pipelines.
Much of the difficulty in such installation is due to the nature of oil and gas pipelines. Pipelines are typically installed with 3 to 6 feet of groundcover. Oil pipelines range in diameter from 6 to 48 inches. Gas pipelines range in diameter from 16 to 48 inches, and may be at 200 to 1500 psi. While maps of active lines typically exist, vital data, such as the diameter of the pipe, lateral junctions, y- and t-joints left for expansion, location of curves, etc., may not be included. Additionally, what data there is may be rendered unreliable by uncertainty, soil erosion, or migration of the pipe due to the passage of time.
Thus, whether a pipeline has been installed 6 months, 10 years, or half a century prior to an installation, any installation of a monitoring line next to a pipeline is problematic for several reasons.
Additionally, to be effective, fiber lines should be installed from 18 inches to 6 feet away from the pipeline. Urban and suburban utility easements may limit the maximum separation possible. For gas lines, the preferred installation position for leak detection may be at 10 o'clock or 2 o'clock relative to the pipeline. For oil lines, the preferred position may be at 5 o'clock or 7 o'clock. The optimal position for detecting digging may be directly above the pipeline. In each of these cases, a monitoring line will be less effective with distance from the pipeline.
Fiber lines and similar monitoring lines may be installed by conventional vibratory plows, trenchers, horizontal directional drills and other methods. However, as detailed above, the underground pipe's location is unpredictable and an inadvertent strike of the line could be catastrophic.
A charge or electromagnetic signal may be induced on the oil or natural gas pipeline, as many of these pipelines are made of a conductive material, like steel. When made of non-conductive material such as plastic, a tracer wire is buried alongside the pipeline to facilitate pipeline location by inducing a charge or signal on the wire. A signal transmitter may be attached to such tracer wire or conductive pipelines to impress or induce a signal along its length. Such active locating causes a pipe to be “illuminated” such that locating devices can detect the signal as it emanates from the pipe.
Due to the relatively large diameters of some oil and gas pipelines, and the relatively close distance at which a monitoring line needs to be installed, an “illuminated” pipe may appear less like a filament and more like a surface to locating devices. Additionally, tees, elbows, pipe taps and other anomalies may render the pipe non-cylindrical in stretches. Thus, error will be associated with an estimated centerline or an estimated outside edge of a detected pipe. The system disclosed herein accounts for such error when installing a monitoring line near a previously installed pipeline.
With reference to
The monitoring cable 12 may be of a type known in the industry to detect external hazards, leaks, or internal degradation of the pipeline. Such cables are typically fiber optic, though some cables may include specialized sensing cables or sensors which sense a physical change in pipeline operation. This physical change could be a leak, change in temperature, vibration or other physical phenomenon. In operation of the system, as shown in
The second node 18 sends data indicative of the received signal to a monitoring processor 20. The monitoring processor 20 analyzes the received signal for a change in pipeline operation indicating an interruption or distortion. Such an interruption or distortion will determine the location and nature of a hazard. Remedial or preventive measures may be taken at the precise location of the hazard.
As shown in
In prior art systems, the monitoring cable 12 and pipeline would need to be installed at the same time. This is due to difficulties in installing a monitoring cable 12 underground near the footprint 14 of a previously buried pipeline. However, due to the installation machine 10, a monitoring cable 12 may be installed in proximity to a pipeline with a residence time of more than six months to a year. In some instances, pipelines will have been in place for decades prior to installation of the monitoring cable 12.
With reference again to
The installation machine 10 comprises a plow assembly 30 disposed at the rear end 24 along the longitudinal axis. The plow assembly 30 comprises a plow blade 32 (
The installation machine 10 further comprises at least one sensor 40 disposed on the frame. Preferably, the installation machine 10 comprises a plurality of sensors. The plurality of sensors 40 may be spaced longitudinally relative to the frame 12. The sensors 4o may alternatively, or in addition, be spaced laterally about the frame or vertically relative to the surface of the ground.
In any case, sensors 4o are operatively connected to a processor 100. The processor 100 analyzes signals received by the sensors 40 as will be further described below, and uses those signals to determine the distance and orientation of the pipeline relative to plow, and display or make operational or steering adjustments in response. The processor 100 may be included onboard the machine 10 as shown in
The sensors 40 may be magnetometers, magnetoresistive devices, triaxial ferrite rods, triaxial air core antennas, or similar sensing devices in controlled geometries. A single point magnetic field decomposition may be used to determine the relative orientation of the pipeline from the sensor 12, but not necessarily separation distance. Using two or more spaced-apart sensors 40 may allow distance to be estimated and may provide steering input as the sensors 40 detect a change in the course of the footprint 14. The processor 100 may then instruct the machine 10 to maintain a relatively constant distance from the footprint. Alternatively, distance may be displayed to a machine operator, who steers the tractor to maintain the desired distance. The sensors 40 may be calibrated to a representative pipe segment to improve distance estimates obtained from the processor 100.
In one embodiment, shown in
As shown, two sensors 40 are laterally spaced on the first arm 44 and two sensors are laterally spaced on the second arm 46. The arms 44, 46 of the sensor outrigger 42 may telescope to adjust the distance between sensors. This will be advantageous when changing the offset distance between tractor 10 and the pipe centerline 15. The outrigger 42 may alternatively comprise only one arm 44, as shown in
The outrigger 42 may be placed in line with the longitudinal axis 26 of the machine 10, as shown in
In
The sensors 40 disposed on opposite sides of the centerline 15 of footprint 14 may coordinate to indicate equivalent but opposite or balanced readings. Such a result indicates that the footprint 14 is centered between opposing sensors 40. The installation machine 10 may be steered as changes in the field are detected by the sensors 40 to maintain this “null” or balanced sensor 40 reading. By centering the footprint 14 and pipeline between a pair of sensors 40, a minimum distance between the pipeline and the plow blade 32 may be maintained.
While an outrigger 42 may be used with the installation machine 10, a separate vehicle (not shown) could contain the sensors 40 described above. The separate vehicle could either operate simultaneously with the installation vehicle 10, or could create a record of the footprint 14 for later use by the installation vehicle. This record may be a physical marker, such as a paint line, or a virtual marker, such as gps coordinates, virtual paint markers, or the like. A separate vehicle could communicate with the installation machine 10 via Bluetooth or similar communication methods to establish a preferred orientation when a monitoring cable 12 is being simultaneously installed.
With reference now to
The proximity sensor 54 may be of the same type as sensors 40, or may be a ferrite rod or other antenna capable of detecting the transmitted steady-state signal emanating from the pipeline. In
A suspended mass generator (not shown) or equivalent power source may be built into the plow blade 32 to provide power for the proximity sensor 54 and any corresponding electronics package in the blade structure.
The proximity sensor 54 is configured to provide an indication of separation from the pipeline. A generally decreasing separation distance, indicated by a strengthening received signal or other indicia, may indicate an approaching pipeline strike. The processor 100 may be configured to provide a minimum gap for the distance 17 (
Communication between the processor 100, steering systems on the machine 10, and the various sensors 40, 54 may be provided by wireless methods, such as Bluetooth. Alternatively, communication may be to a remote operator location some distance away from machine 10.
The plow blade 32 is preferably made of a non-magnetic alloy, such as Mangalloy, Nitronic 50 or Nitronic 60. Other such alloys may likewise be used. Further, pockets for installation of internal sensors such as in
The plow assembly 30 may comprise plow shoes, tires, or other devices to manually control the depth. The processor 100 may alternatively control plow depth based upon the detected position of the pipeline. In this configuration, the plow assembly 30 may be adjusted by a control system (not shown). The control system may comprise hydraulic cylinders (not shown) to control the maximum plow depth, and thus the depth of the trench in which the monitoring line 12 is installed. The control system responds to signals generated by the processor 100 to adjust plow depth based upon one or more factors such as pipe depth, blade depth, surface contour of the soil, plow location, position relative to an external laser plane, or others.
The sensors 40 and proximity sensor 54 may be responsive to cathodic protection signals commonly applied to metallic pipelines for reducing corrosion. Such a configuration allows existing pipeline signals to be used to locate the pipeline.
The installation machine 10 may be controlled remotely with the operator maintaining a distance from the footprint 14 of the pipeline. The machine 10 may follow a predetermined path, a paint line, a guide wire, or may be steered automatically due to the detected position of the pipeline.
With reference to
Use of a triaxial magnetometer as one or all of the sensors 40, 54 allows one of the three axes of the sensor 40, 54 to be aligned with the longitudinal axis 26. If the sensor 40, 54 is near a filamentary conductor, this axial measurement will be null when the longitudinal axis 26 and the conductor are parallel. However, as the pipeline size increases, its field will not approximate a filament. Therefore, the use of several redundant sensors and measurements described herein will aid in maintaining a parallel installation of the monitoring cable 12 at a desired distance from the pipeline 13.
With reference to
The sensors 40A-D are disposed a known distance d away from each other on each respective arm 44, 46. Thus, each pair of sensors 40A, 40C and 40B, 40D is optimally a distance d/2 away from a position directly above the centerline 15 of the pipeline.
The processor 100 wishes to maintain the centerline 15 of the pipeline at equal distances from the first sensor 40A and third sensor 40C. However, in
The processor 100 may then determine a steering control response. As the error e should be less than d/2. The steering control response can be illustrated by considering the case where two sensors 40A-D are coplanar with a filamentary line. In such a case, the processor's steering response would be given by:
In a practical geometry, the response is complicated by the fact that the pipeline and sensors are not coplanar, and by the possibility that the pipeline has a diameter sufficiently large that it may not be treated as a filament. The general appearance of the steering response will, however, be similar in its general features to the mathematical relationship given above. In particular, a steering control will produce a signal when ε=0.
By detecting the error between sensors 40A-D disposed both at the front arm 44 and rear arm 46, the processor 100 will determine not only that a turn to the left is required, but also the magnitude of the steering correction in degrees based upon the errors in the front and rear sensors 40A-D.
The sensor orientation of
Changes may be made in the construction, operation and arrangement of the various parts, elements, steps and procedures described herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as described in the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62489815 | Apr 2017 | US |