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Nondestructive Onsite Grade Verification for Trenchless Applications

Nondestructive Onsite Grade Verification for Trenchless Applications

Date : 2021-08-23

Trenchless methodologies represent an innovative and critical approach for the safe and effective management of pipeline infrastructure. The uptake has required collaboration between research firms, contractors and pipeline operators working together to advance a multitude of technologies.

In the material verification space, with the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) Mega Rule taking effect in 2021, there has been tremendous pressure to develop industry solutions to nondestructively assess pipe grade and safe operating pressure. In-line inspection tools have proven invaluable for corrosion assessment, and currently, there are a handful of available methods to assess material strength and toughness. This is not a new need, and indeed, in the nineties when the first Stress-Strain Microprobe® system was developed and patented, there was pushback from conventional destructive testing providers. However, despite pushback on ASTM standardization committees during that era, the technology was still used by top US national laboratories and verified for use by their internal teams. In 1996, the technology received the R&D 100 Award under the name PortaFlow-P1 Portable/In-Situ Stress Strain Microprobe System®. Fahmy Haggag, the inventor, accepted the award on behalf of his firm, Advanced Technology Corporation.

Fast forward to the present, the technology is now commonly known by its non-destructive test technique as Automated Ball Indentation® (ABI®) and has been used by nuclear facilities, pipeline operators, water companies, and aerospace firms to nondestructively verify their assets.

WHAT IS ABI®?

ABI® is a nondestructive mechanical testing technique for determining Tensile and Fracture Toughness Properties. It is based on progressive indentation with intermediate partial unloadings until the maximum depth (maximum strain) is reached, and then the indenter is fully unloaded. The ABI® test is a macroscopic (bulk) technique that measures the properties on a small volume of metallic materials.

PORTABILITY AND SPEED

During an excavation, particularly in high density areas, speed to test and concurrently assess pipe grade can prove critical to cost control, savings, traffic control on paved streets and site management. While the ABI® method was initially developed and used for nondestructive structural integrity assessment of nuclear pressure vessels; the applications have grown across the last three decades. More recently, applications for pipeline operators have proven beneficial for grade determinations and material verification, but also for meeting tight excavation and construction schedules.

Both the ABI® test method and overall speed of the technology allows operators to realize significant savings and safety advantages over conventional destructive testing costs. Our technicians are trained and certified to provide testing services on in-service pipelines and pressure vessels. 

ABI® provides a nondestructive measurement of tensile properties and fracture toughness that eliminates the need to cut 

any samples. In fact, our ball indentations are shallow, with smooth edges and produce compressive stresses in the material that retard crack initiation. 

The indentation is shown to scale on a dime. Each test is performed in under five minutes (three tests per location are recommended to determine average values and their standard deviations) and measure the following key mechanical properties:

• Yield Strength

• True-Stress/True-Plastic Strain Curve

• Strain-Hardening Exponent (n

• Strength Coefficient (k)

• Uniform Ductility

• Ultimate Strength

• Initiation Fracture Toughnes


ABI® is an ideal technique for measuring material properties – tensile and fracture toughness - quickly and nondestructively. The testing system can be lowered into and pulled out of the keyhole in less than an hour and immediately provide the data and results needed.

ADDITIONAL VALIDATION

In 2007, Shell Pipeline Company sponsored a Pipeline Research Council International (PRCI) report that complemented their internal validation efforts. BP supplied data on tank steel that was also tested for before the publication. This 94-page report, titled “L52280 In-Situ Measurement of Pipeline Mechanical Properties Using Stress-Strain Microprobe – Validation” is available through www.prci.org. In the report, materials are tested at varying temperatures with consistent data integrity – “an appropriate and relevant amount of data from the nondestructive Automated Ball Indentation® (ABI®) tests and the destructive tensile and fracture toughness tests provides reasonable statistical data sets to establish the validity and accuracy of the ABI technique which produces both tensile and fracture toughness properties from each single test.” The ABI® Standard Test Method and its precision values from a 6-lab Round Robin (ILS) study is included on pages 36-60 of the report.

When applied to in-service pipelines, the test can provide considerable savings because operators are able to quickly close the excavation. And when timing is coordinated across contractors, some operators have been able to open, test, and close up to 12 locations in one day using only one testing team. 

SYSTEM PLACEMENT WITHIN KEYHOLE

There is a minimal amount of space required to conduct a test – a 14x4-inch surface area is needed for the magnets to affix to the outer pipe surface. The coating must be removed for the magnets to properly operate, but only a 1 x1-inch surface area requires a white finish polish to conduct the test (using a 220 grit polishing disk). The surface does not need to be flat, only smooth. The resulting ball indentation does not need to be buffed out afterwards because it creates a spherical indentation that is akin to shot-peening (an application commonly used in the aerospace industry and plane fuselage to prevent fatigue cracks). The system is attached/connected to the electronics/control cabinet via protected cables that can extend up to 30 feet so key-hole depth is not an issue when testing.

DETERMINING MAXIMUM ALLOWABLE OPERATING PRESSURE (MAOP) WITH VARYING WALL THICKNESS

Smart-pig MFL tools and nondestructive ABI® testing are complementary. A salient example is a run that discovered a 

50-foot pipe joint (12-inch outer diameter) with a reported wall thickness of 0.281 inches while the rest of the pipeline had a 

wall thickness of 0.312 inches of Grade X52. It was obvious that the uniformly reduced thickness was not due to corrosion but, most likely, because the original joint was replaced due to severe localized corrosion (the pipe joint was in a swamp area). 

The ABI® tests determined and confirmed that the joint met Grade X65 for the mechanical properties’ requirements so the 

maximum allowable operating pressure (MAOP) of the line did not need to be lowered since the increased Grade of X65 (instead of X52) compensated for the reduced thickness. The MAOP is a function of three parameters (specified minimum yield strength “SMYS” x wall thickness / pipe outer diameter), in addition to the various mandatory factors of safety. 

PREVENTING A TANK FRACTURE WHEN INSERTING A NEW NOZZLE

Another application for ABI® has been to determine the fracture toughness of a storage tank wall before cutting a plug for a new nozzle/outlet fabrication to ensure no brittle fracture could occur during the modification. ABI® testing has been able to measure tank wall mechanical properties to achieve modifications safely. The software calculation provides instant information, so it is particularly useful when trying to avoid additional asset damage. 

DOES INTERNAL PRESSURE OF AN IN-SERVICE PIPELINE AFFECT THE ABI® TEST RESULTS?

A common question is whether internal pressure of an internal pipe can impact the test. The good news is that internal pressure or hoop stress condition creates only elastic stress on the internal surface of an in-service pipeline. The maximum allowed hoop stress cannot produce yield strength of the pipe in order to avoid pipeline bulging and any potential failure. Hence, the elastic stress (which is lower than the yield strength by the margin of safety used in the MAOP) cannot affect the test results of the ABI® test.

CONCLUSION

As we move out of this pandemic era into increased focus on compliance and achieving safe, cost-effective solutions, technology adoption will be critical for our industry. As operators assemble their plans for the coming decade, we look forward to continuing partnerships with both operators and contractors in advancing cost-effective and technically sound and accurate solutions. While the technology described has been used and validated numerous times over the years across multiple industries and used in over twenty countries, there is still expanding opportunity for continuing to provide value as the PHMSA Mega Rule takes effect.

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