Determining the useful life of district heating pipes: Correlation between natural and accelerated ageing
Journal article, 2020
For this study, 10 pipes that have been in service for many years in Sweden and Norway were evaluated. The aim was to study the impact of natural ageing on the mechanical adhesion and chemical structure of the polyurethane foam, which affects the pipe’s performance. A test method developed at the Research Institutes of Sweden (RISE), called RISE plug method, was used to study the mechanical adhesion strength. In addition, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy was used to observe any change in the chemical structure.
The results were compared with previous analyses of DH pipes exposed to accelerated ageing. This information helps to provide a better comprehension of the deterioration of the current generation of pre-insulated DH pipes and to improve the accelerated ageing methods used nowadays to predict the technical lifetime of DH pipes. Our results suggest that the lifetime of DH pipes has been underestimated when using artificial ageing at relatively high temperatures. The data collected from naturally aged pipes gave confirmatory information about their physical status compared with our laboratory tests. This study also suggests that infrared analyses could be used as an early indication of the degradation of the polyurethane foam at the interface with a steel pipe.
Polyurethane foam
Adhesion strength
Accelerated ageing
Lifetime prediction
Degradation
Natural ageing
District heating pipes
Author
Alberto Vega
RISE Research Institutes of Sweden
Nazdaneh Yarahmadi
RISE Research Institutes of Sweden
Ignacy Jakubowicz
RISE Research Institutes of Sweden
Polymer Degradation and Stability
0141-3910 (ISSN)
Vol. 175Subject Categories
Polymer Chemistry
Polymer Technologies
Organic Chemistry
DOI
10.1016/j.polymdegradstab.2020.109117