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Basic Cathodic Protection Measurement and Monitoring- IR Considerations Western Regional Gas Conference 2008 Tempe, Arizona By Paul Sedlet, Accurate Corrosion.

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Presentation on theme: "Basic Cathodic Protection Measurement and Monitoring- IR Considerations Western Regional Gas Conference 2008 Tempe, Arizona By Paul Sedlet, Accurate Corrosion."— Presentation transcript:

1 Basic Cathodic Protection Measurement and Monitoring- IR Considerations Western Regional Gas Conference 2008 Tempe, Arizona By Paul Sedlet, Accurate Corrosion Control, Inc.

2 Questions to be answered
What IR needs to be considered? Why consider it? How can I consider it?

3 What is IR? IR

4 Summary of This Presentation
Criteria for Cathodic Protection NACE SP-0169 NACE TM-0497 Components of a Pipe-to-Soil Measurement Consideration of Soil IR Consideration of Metal IR Practical Examples

5 NACE NACE SP-0169, Item No. 21001 NACE TM-0497, Item No. 21231
Control of External Corrosion on Underground or Submerged Metallic Piping Systems. Specifically Section NACE TM-0497, Item No Measurement Techniques Related to Criteria for Cathodic Protection on Underground or Submerged Metallic Piping Systems. Specifically Section 7.1.

6 NACE SP 0169, Forward

7 NACE SP 0169 Criteria,

8 NACE TM 0497

9 NACE TM 0497

10 What is a Pipe-to-soil Potential Measurement?
Instruments necessary to take a P/S Voltmeter with high internal impedance Reference electrode Components of the Measurement Reference to electrolyte interface Pipe to electrolyte interface Soil IR Metal IR

11 Pipe-to-Soil Potential
Voltmeter Ref Cell Test Box Ref to Soil Interface Mixed Potential Soil IR Test Wire Soil to Pipe Interface Metal IR

12 Voltage Drops Other Than Across the Structure to Electrolyte Boundary
Instrumentation and Internal Impedance Reference to electrolyte boundary Soil IR Metal IR

13 Consideration of Soil IR

14 Polarization and Soil IR
What is a “polarized” potential How do you measure “polarization” Soil IR is the voltage drop that results from current flow in the soil portion of the circuit Methods to consider soil IR Instant Off IR Coupon

15 Waveform Example- Instant Off
Soil IR Instant Off

16 Waveform Example- Polarized Potential
Soil IR Instant Off & Polarized Potential Polarization Decay

17 Example- Soil IR ON-Off CIS

18 Example High Soil IR

19 Using Test Coupons to Consider Soil IR
NACE RP , The Use of Test Coupons for Cathodic Protection Monitoring Applications Things to know Use coupon of same material as pipe. Size of coupon should be that of largest expected coating holiday. Coupon needs to be installed and allowed to corrode for months before use. Should not be installed in a foreign voltage gradient.

20 Consideration of Metal IR

21 Copper Cable Resistance Data
AWG Stranded Copper Wire Resistance and Voltage Drop Size Diameter 77ºF Resistance for length (Ohms) Voltage Drop (Milli- volts) AWG Metric mm2 Circular mils inch mm ohm/1000' ohm/km 20 0.518 1,022 0.0369 0.938 34.000 .3109 3109 18 0.823 1,624 0.0465 1.182 6.5227 21.400 .1957 1957 16 1.309 2,583 0.0587 1.491 4.0843 13.400 .1225 1225 14 2.081 4,107 0.0740 1.880 2.5756 8.450 .0773 773 12 3.309 6,530 0.0933 2.371 1.6215 5.320 .0486 486 10 5.261 10,383 0.1177 2.989 1.0180 3.340 .0305 305 8 8.366 16,510 0.1484 3.770 0.6401 2.100 .0192 192 6 13.302 26,251 0.1871 4.753 0.4023 1.320 .0121 121 4 21.151 41,741 0.2360 5.994 0.2533 0.831 .0076 76 2 33.631 66,371 0.2976 7.558 0.1594 0.523 .0048 48 1 42.408 83,693 0.3341 8.487 0.1265 0.415 .0038 38 53.475 105,535 0.3752 9.530 0.1003 0.329 .0030 30 ENTER Length in feet 30      Amps 10

22 Rectifier Negative Lug Example
Example of metal IR error from reading a P/S potential from a rectifier negative lug, using previous table. Rectifier DC amperage output = 10 A Negative cable is 30 feet long and #4 copper Then metal IR error is 76 mV

23 Standard Steel Pipe Size Data (Courtesy of Mesa Products Website)
Pipe Size inches Outside Diameter inches Wall Thickness inches Weight per Foot pounds Nom DC Resistance micro-ohms/foot 2 2.375 0.154 3.65 79.20 4 4.500 0.237 10.80 26.80 6 6.625 0.28 19.00 15.20 8 8.625 0.322 28.60 10.10 10 10.750 0.365 40.50 7.13 12 12.750 0.375 49.60 5.82 14 14.00 54.60 5.29 16 16.00 62.60 4.61 18 18.00 70.60 4.09 20 20.00 78.60 3.68 22 22.00 86.60 3.34 24 24.00 94.60 3.06 26 26.00 102.60 2.82 28 28.00 110.60 2.62 30 30.00 118.70 2.44 32 32.00 126.60 2.15 34 34.00 134.60 36 36.00 142.60 2.03

24 Consideration of Metal IR in CIS
Metal IR is the error that occurs in the pipe-to-electrolyte measurement due to current flow in the pipeline or in a cable. Metal IR can be measured between test points as the voltage drop between the test points and relates approximately to near ground (NG) and far ground (FG) potentials. Metal IR error can either add or subtract from the actual potential, depending upon the resultant current flow between test points

25 Gas Distribution CIS Example
If conducting a CIS on a 2” diameter gas line, with a rectifier, output 10 amps, what is the possible metal IR influence? From the previous table, 2” pipe is 79.2 micro-ohms per foot. At the end of a 1000 foot run going towards or away from the rectifier, then:

26 Gas Distribution Continued
x 1000 = ohms x 10 amps = .792 volts or 792 mV. This means that your “On” P/S could be off by nearly 800mV in this example!

27 Example: Metal IR Influence (error) in CIS Data

28 Example- Method of Metal IR Compensation
The above graph is the last portion of a 3300 foot CIS run. The run ends at a rectifier. Measured “On” metal IR drop is 800mV, far ground lead positive. “On” NG is -1600mV, FG is -800mV Correction method, assuming even current pickup on the pipeline 800mV/3300ft = -.24mV per foot applied cumulatively along the run.

29 Metal IR Compensated CIS Data


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