|
See our upcoming Article in |
|||||||
![]() |
|||||||
|


To overcome the limitations of test post readings, led more than 45
years ago, to the development of the Close Interval Potential Survey
(CIPS) technique. In CIPS a long trailing cable is used to make
contact to the pipeline via the test post and pipe to soil
potentials are measured at regular short intervals along the whole
pipeline route thus providing a more intimate view of the level of
protection along the whole pipeline. The conventional voltmeter is
usually replaced by a data logging voltmeter to gather the large
quantity of measurements made. The technique is claimed to provide a
detailed potential profile and the results are widely used to assess
the overall effectiveness of the pipeline Cathodic Protection. The
usual practice in CIPS is to determine the pipe to soil potential
with all recognised DC sources (transformer rectifiers) operational
(ON POTENTIAL) and then with all the DC sources interrupted (OFF
POTENTIAL). The latter measurement, the OFF potential is now
regarded world wide as the most important potential, and is thought
to largely eliminate the IR voltage drop errors present in ON
readings that are caused by current flow through the soil and films
of corrosion product on the pipe surface. The concept of ON/OFF
potentials as a technique is based on the principle that when the CP
is switched OFF, the IR component in the potential measurements
decays almost instantaneously but the pipe to soil interface
polarisation decays very slowly over hours/days depending upon the
soil composition. This allows what is considered to be a more
correct pipe to soil potential (the OFF Potential) and hence a
better assessment of the level of protection to be measured (free
from the IR error). There is no industry standard identifying the
switching frequency and the time after switching that the ON and OFF
potentials should be measured. Each vendor of equipment have chosen
their own time sequences which depends upon synchronisation method
(and drift of Synchronisation) and accuracy not only of the
interrupters used but also the synchronisation of the Data Logger
with the Interrupters.

DCVG Ltd have designed and have commercially available after
thorough testing Quantum CIPS equipment, Satellite controlled and
capable of operating at variable ON/OFF sequences and in particular
at the DCVG pulse frequency of 0.45 ON/0.8 OFF so two types of
survey, true analogue DCVG and CIPS can be run independently but as
a one pass survey as required by the ECDA concept.