Back to Search Start Over

Characteristics and effects of electromagnetic interference from UHVDC and geomagnetic storms on buried pipelines.

Authors :
Liu, Hongzheng
Li, Qingquan
Li, Haixia
Xue, Zhitong
Han, Mingming
Liu, Lianguang
Source :
International Journal of Electrical Power & Energy Systems. Feb2021, Vol. 125, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

• The characteristic analysis for the influence of the grounding pole current on the pipeline shows that the high-power UHVDC project that began in recent years impacts pipelines that are within 180 km from the grounding pole. It was found that the stray current and PSP offset are related to the extreme value, while the distance to the pipeline, the grounding pole current, the distance between the insulating flanges at the two sides, the operation of the potentiostat, and their impact mechanisms are very complex. • The characteristic analysis for the influence of geomagnetic storms on pipelines shows that the GIC and PSP offsets are related to the rate of change for the geomagnetic field dH/dt. The pipeline GIC is quasi-DC, and the dynamic DC interference has a more significant impact of pipeline corrosion. Determining the effects of the GIC on pipeline corrosion and prevention are the goals of future research. • Comparisons of the influence and effects of the two interference sources on the pipeline shows that their difference is in the underlying mechanism, the range and intensity of the influence, the corrosion rate of the stray current, and the PSP offset. The influence intensity of the grounding pole current is greater, but the duration is shorter and its influencing range is smaller. The geomagnetic storm interference has the characteristics of a long duration and large influence range. The influence of ±800 kV ultra-high voltage direct current (UHVDC) transmission monopole operation on buried oil pipelines was compared between the 6250 A grounding pole current conditions of the Zalute-Qingzhou Project on December 24, 2017 and the Shanghai Temple-Shandong Project on January 2, 2017. Besides, the influence of geomagnetic storms on the safety of buried oil pipelines were also analyzed based on monitoring data from the geoelectric field of the China Anqiu geomagnetic station on September 9 and 29, 2017. The results show that the influence of the DC grounding pole current on the pipeline is related to the distance between the ground electrode and the pipeline, the operating state of the potentiostat, and the spacing of the insulating flange on the pipeline. The geomagnetically induced current and pipe-soil potential offsets for the geomagnetic storm intruding the pipeline are related to the rate of change for the geomagnetic field. There are differences in the stray current and PSP generation mechanisms for the intruded pipeline caused by the two interference sources: the intensity and influence range of the interference source, and the annual average corrosion rate of the pipeline. Compared with the DC grounding pole current, the geomagnetic storm has a greater interference effect on buried pipelines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01420615
Volume :
125
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Electrical Power & Energy Systems
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
147112020
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijepes.2020.106494