Applied Water Science (Aug 2023)
Study on tide characteristics and mechanism of PSP in buried pipeline along the lake
Abstract
Abstract The fluctuations of the Pipe-to-Soil Potential (PSP) in buried pipes are influenced by the geoelectric field induced by changes in the Earth's magnetic field, which can accelerate pipeline corrosion. Monitoring data of PSP along China's West–East Gas Pipeline near the lake indicates obvious tidal changes. This study proposes that the periodic movement of the conductivity boundary of the seepage area near the lake shore caused by tides is the fundamental cause of the tidal changes in PSP. The movement of the boundary changes the range of the H polarization of the geoelectric field, resulting in periodic changes in the PSP of the pipeline outside the seepage area. To investigate this mechanism, a dynamic boundary model of conductivity in the seepage area of Sailimu Lake in Xinjiang was established, and the characteristics of PSP at different distances from the boundary were analyzed using electromagnetic field finite element method and DSTL pipeline model. The study compared the simulation results of the model with the PSP data of the cathodic protection station and PSP monitoring station near Sailimu Lake, during a geomagnetic disturbance on September 23–24, 2016. The results of the study, as well as the corrosion of the test strips along the lake, verified the validity of the boundary change mechanism and model of the seepage zone. This study provides a theoretical basis for corrosion protection of pipelines near the lake’s edge.
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