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All of the seawater systems incorporate piping of
various sizes according to the volume and flow of water necessary.
As the systems branch throughout the ship, the size of the piping
decreases increasing the velocity of the water flowing through the
pipe. Each piping system utilizes valves, strainers, check valves,
and other pressure regulating components to maintain the required
seawater flow rates and pressures. Because these components are
manufactured using materials similar to the piping itself, galvanic
corrosion is not ordinarily a problem. However, because flanges,
used at the point where piping connects to a piece of equipment,
are generally manufactured from dissimilar materials, crevice corrosion
remains a persistent concern. Since the crevice corrosion is almost
always confined to within the crevice itself, the pipe joints must
be periodically disassembled and visually inspected for evidence
of crevice corrosion. This process is time consuming and, consequently,
expensive.
CORMIT Technology
The goal of the CORMIT project is to develop a state-of-the-art
crevice corrosion detection and mitigation technique for the ship
seawater pipe system components. The KBSI team, led by Dr. Paul
Koola, is applying their expertise in artificial neural
networks (ANN) to develop multi-fusion software technology that
integrates a variety of data from a number of different sensors.
This give users a more nuanced perspective of corrosion build up
in the piping system.
Because of the awkward geometry of the pipe systems,
the real time monitoring of crevice corrosion using traditional
monitoring techniques was not possible. Following a careful study
of the piping system and traditional monitoring technologies, we
determined that crevice areas had to be directly monitored. KBSI's
work in Phase I of the project addressed this difficulty by developing
an instrument O-ring and gasket with multiple sensor integration
capability for multi-sensor fusion analysis. We embeded several
minitiaturized electrodes within O-ring and/or gaskets for monitoring
the impedance of crevice surface, pH of crevice solution, solution
resistance, and dissolved oxygen of crevice solution. These sensors,
when used concurrently, yielded enough information to develop mitigation
techniques based on impressed currents.
The second step focused on developing condition based
maintenance (CBM) software for detecting the onset of crevice corrosion.
This software has the novel capability to detect crevice corrosion
of varying severity, incipient crevice corrosion in the presence
of significant sensor noise, crevice corrosion conditions for which
no prior information nor sensor data is available.
The goal of KBSI's work in Phase II is to develop
state-of-the-art software that performs multi-sensor fusion on crevice
corrosion detection sensors. This involves developing a centralized
monitoring device (CMD) with distributed intelligent corrosion sensing
and mitigation (ICSM) hardware/software to detect and mitigate crevice
and galvanic corrosion in seawater pipe components. The CDM displays
the corrosion status for the seawater components. The ICSM component
developed in the Phase II project will have the capability to sense
and mitigate crevice corrosion for seawater components like flanges,
valves, and strainers. Using the data gathered by the ICSM, the
CDM displays the corrosion status for the seawater components.
Clearly the CORMIT technology has applications beyond
the Navy's use. A market for corrosion mitigation products already
exists for the shipping and offshore platform industries. Additional
CORMIT commercial application opportunities exist in power plants
and the oil and gas refining industries, where large shore based
facilities also use seawater as a cooling medium.
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