Remaining life assessment for boiler tubes affected by combined effect of wall thinning and overheating

Boilers, the most troublesome components of electric power, chemical and processing plants generate high costs in unscheduled shutdowns, repairs and power replacement. Every occurrence of ruptured tubes leads to emergency shutdown of the entire plant. This paper describes the joint international eff...

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Main Authors: Sarken D. Kapayeva, Marek J. Bergander, Anatoli Vakhguelt, Serik I. Khairaliyev
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JVE International 2017-12-01
Series:Journal of Vibroengineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jvejournals.com/article/18219
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spelling doaj-49a2012addbf4de3947cd55777db6b7e2020-11-24T21:38:03ZengJVE InternationalJournal of Vibroengineering1392-87162538-84602017-12-011985892590710.21595/jve.2017.1821918219Remaining life assessment for boiler tubes affected by combined effect of wall thinning and overheatingSarken D. Kapayeva0Marek J. Bergander1Anatoli Vakhguelt2Serik I. Khairaliyev3Eastern Kazakhstan Technical University, Ust Kamenogorsk, KazakhstanMagnetic Development, Inc., Madison, CT, USANazarbayev University, Astana, KazakhstanNazarbayev University, Astana, KazakhstanBoilers, the most troublesome components of electric power, chemical and processing plants generate high costs in unscheduled shutdowns, repairs and power replacement. Every occurrence of ruptured tubes leads to emergency shutdown of the entire plant. This paper describes the joint international effort to develop faster and more efficient methods for condition assessment and remaining life prediction for boiler tubes made of low-carbon steel. Authors have undertaken a systematic research with the major objective to correlate the results of combined nondestructive testing (NDT) with condition assessment of boiler tubes. The evaluation included non-contact wall thickness measurement with EMAT technology plus internal oxide layer measurement with specialized ultrasonics. While the first method shows the remaining tube wall thickness, thus allowing calculating total stress, the latter one has the potential to characterize microstructure degradation, which up to now could only be determined by destructive analysis. The special attention was directed towards identification and analysis of creep damage due to overheating. In recent years, techniques were developed to identify heat damage by measuring the thickness of internal oxide scale because even a thin scale can seriously impede heat transfer causing elevation of temperature in tube wall. A combined effect of wall thinning and the “degree of overheating” on tube remaining life was investigated. The uniqueness of this work lies in one of the first attempts to develop and validate a tool for methodology for condition assessment and remaining life prediction, for Steel20 tube material, while most of previous authors had concentrated on Cr-Mo steels. Another contribution is the combined treatment of two different damage mechanisms and practical utilization of two various NDT techniques. To-date, both results are treated separately, and consequently separate reject criteria exist for overheating and separate for wall thinning. As a result of work presented in this paper, a procedure was recommended to calculate the tube remaining life based on the results of two ultrasonic tests.https://www.jvejournals.com/article/18219ultrasonic testingEMATtube inspectionwall thicknessoxide scale
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarken D. Kapayeva
Marek J. Bergander
Anatoli Vakhguelt
Serik I. Khairaliyev
spellingShingle Sarken D. Kapayeva
Marek J. Bergander
Anatoli Vakhguelt
Serik I. Khairaliyev
Remaining life assessment for boiler tubes affected by combined effect of wall thinning and overheating
Journal of Vibroengineering
ultrasonic testing
EMAT
tube inspection
wall thickness
oxide scale
author_facet Sarken D. Kapayeva
Marek J. Bergander
Anatoli Vakhguelt
Serik I. Khairaliyev
author_sort Sarken D. Kapayeva
title Remaining life assessment for boiler tubes affected by combined effect of wall thinning and overheating
title_short Remaining life assessment for boiler tubes affected by combined effect of wall thinning and overheating
title_full Remaining life assessment for boiler tubes affected by combined effect of wall thinning and overheating
title_fullStr Remaining life assessment for boiler tubes affected by combined effect of wall thinning and overheating
title_full_unstemmed Remaining life assessment for boiler tubes affected by combined effect of wall thinning and overheating
title_sort remaining life assessment for boiler tubes affected by combined effect of wall thinning and overheating
publisher JVE International
series Journal of Vibroengineering
issn 1392-8716
2538-8460
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Boilers, the most troublesome components of electric power, chemical and processing plants generate high costs in unscheduled shutdowns, repairs and power replacement. Every occurrence of ruptured tubes leads to emergency shutdown of the entire plant. This paper describes the joint international effort to develop faster and more efficient methods for condition assessment and remaining life prediction for boiler tubes made of low-carbon steel. Authors have undertaken a systematic research with the major objective to correlate the results of combined nondestructive testing (NDT) with condition assessment of boiler tubes. The evaluation included non-contact wall thickness measurement with EMAT technology plus internal oxide layer measurement with specialized ultrasonics. While the first method shows the remaining tube wall thickness, thus allowing calculating total stress, the latter one has the potential to characterize microstructure degradation, which up to now could only be determined by destructive analysis. The special attention was directed towards identification and analysis of creep damage due to overheating. In recent years, techniques were developed to identify heat damage by measuring the thickness of internal oxide scale because even a thin scale can seriously impede heat transfer causing elevation of temperature in tube wall. A combined effect of wall thinning and the “degree of overheating” on tube remaining life was investigated. The uniqueness of this work lies in one of the first attempts to develop and validate a tool for methodology for condition assessment and remaining life prediction, for Steel20 tube material, while most of previous authors had concentrated on Cr-Mo steels. Another contribution is the combined treatment of two different damage mechanisms and practical utilization of two various NDT techniques. To-date, both results are treated separately, and consequently separate reject criteria exist for overheating and separate for wall thinning. As a result of work presented in this paper, a procedure was recommended to calculate the tube remaining life based on the results of two ultrasonic tests.
topic ultrasonic testing
EMAT
tube inspection
wall thickness
oxide scale
url https://www.jvejournals.com/article/18219
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AT marekjbergander remaininglifeassessmentforboilertubesaffectedbycombinedeffectofwallthinningandoverheating
AT anatolivakhguelt remaininglifeassessmentforboilertubesaffectedbycombinedeffectofwallthinningandoverheating
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