Measuring and testing – Embrittlement or erosion
Reexamination Certificate
2001-03-05
2003-05-27
Raevis, Robert (Department: 2856)
Measuring and testing
Embrittlement or erosion
Reexamination Certificate
active
06568251
ABSTRACT:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a device and a method for determining the quality of the corrosion on the inside of a wall manufactured from non-corrosion-resistant material of a space in which corrosive conditions prevail.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Such a situation occurs for instance in steam boilers which are adapted to feed for instance the steam turbines of an electric power station, as well as in other types of device such as waste incinerators, boilers provided with fire tubes and the like. In order to be able to estimate the remaining life of the wall of such an installation it is of great importance to have information concerning the thickness and other qualities of the usually inaccessible space in which such corrosive conditions prevail. Particularly in the case of an electric power station this access is especially difficult since, in order to reach the relevant side of the wall, the unit in question of the electric power station has to be shut down. This causes great economic loss.
There also usually exists a need, for instance in the case of irregularities in the process, for knowledge relating to the quality of such an oxide layer.
According to the generally known prior art, a part of the wall of the space is removed and replaced by a corresponding part, whereafter the removed wall part can be examined. This has the drawback that on the one hand the unit has to be shut down and on the other removal and re-placing of a wall part entails high cost, caused on the one hand by the length of time for which the installation must be shut down and on the other by the necessary tests enabling the quality of the welds to be determined after placing of the replacement wall part.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The object of the present invention is to provide such a device and method, wherein the above stated drawbacks are avoided.
This objective is achieved in that at least one part of the wall is removable from the wall without destructive operations and is available after removal for examination outside the space.
This measure has the advantage that an element to be removed without destructive operations can be removed easily and can be replaced.
Although in the first instance a screw is envisaged, other embodiments are in no way precluded, such as a pin or a plug onto which another fixation device is arranged, for instance a bayonet fitting.
However, in the case of a water tube boiler where the walls are formed at least partially by water tubes, it is important that the heat transfer process taking place in the tubes, and thus the flow of liquid or gas through the tubes, may not be interrupted. It is therefore prudent to make such an element as small as possible. The removable wall part is then preferably formed by a bolt screwed into an opening arranged in the wall and provided with screw thread.
It is then also important that the opening is arranged in the strip between two water tubes.
In order to achieve that the corrosion occurring on the bolt has the same quality as the corrosion occurring on the other wall parts, it is important that the bolt be manufactured from the same material as the wall. This reproducibility is improved when the bolt is screwed into the opening up to a position in which the end of the screw thread of the bolt lies flush with the inner side of the wall.
In order to obtain a good resemblance between the oxide development on the actual wall and the bolt, it is important that the temperature of the bolt is substantially equal to that of the wall. The strips between the water tubes of the water tube boiler will have a slightly higher temperature than the tube walls because the tube walls are anyway cooled by the water flowing through the tubes, so that there is no case in which less oxidation occurs on the bolt surface.
To be able to make a comparison between a non-affected part of the exposed surface and an indeed affected part thereof, a part of the surface exposed to the core of the space concerned is covered by a layer of a precious metal, like gold or platina.
So as to prevent wear of the screw thread in the case of repeated screwing in and out of the bolts, the opening is preferably provided with a helicoil.
It is further noted that due to the simplicity of the present invention it becomes possible to repeatedly carry out an examination into the situation of the oxide layer, since the difficulty involved and the accompanying interruption of the operating process is extremely small. During the examination the removed part is preferably sawn through in the direction transversely of the plane of the wall, whereafter it can be inspected visually or microscopically. It will be apparent that this inspection becomes clearer when the sawn surface is polished. The polished surface is photographed in order to record the results of the examination and to enable comparison with corrosion in other situations, for instance at other locations in the same boiler, with other boilers in similar conditions, with other fuels, with the corrosion situation at an earlier or later stage. It is then possible for the photographic image of the polished surface to be converted to digital form and quantified. This provides the option of electronic processing of the results and of determining, for instance by planimetry, a rough estimate of the thickness and quality, such as porosity and sulphide content, of the oxide layer.
REFERENCES:
patent: 3948744 (1976-04-01), Cushing
patent: 3996124 (1976-12-01), Eaton et al.
patent: 4097341 (1978-06-01), Schell et al.
patent: 4563427 (1986-01-01), Weiss et al.
patent: 4631961 (1986-12-01), Yohe et al.
patent: 4945758 (1990-08-01), Carpenter
Huijbregts Walterus M. M.
Primus Andreas J. M.
Banner & Witcoff , Ltd.
N.V. Kema
Raevis Robert
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