CA1241262A - In-situ method for lining pipe with thermoplastic liner - Google Patents

In-situ method for lining pipe with thermoplastic liner

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Publication number
CA1241262A
CA1241262A CA000546507A CA546507A CA1241262A CA 1241262 A CA1241262 A CA 1241262A CA 000546507 A CA000546507 A CA 000546507A CA 546507 A CA546507 A CA 546507A CA 1241262 A CA1241262 A CA 1241262A
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CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
liner
diameter
pipe
rollers
stress
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
CA000546507A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Dale A. Kneller
Andrew D. Whyman
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Insituform Technologies Ltd Canada
EIDP Inc
Original Assignee
DuPont Canada Inc
United Corrosion Consultants Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by DuPont Canada Inc, United Corrosion Consultants Ltd filed Critical DuPont Canada Inc
Priority to CA000546507A priority Critical patent/CA1241262A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1241262A publication Critical patent/CA1241262A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Abstract

ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE

A method is disclosed for lining pipe section with a rigid tubular liner of synthetic polymer by pulling the liner through diameter-reducing rollers adjusted so that the resultant outside diameter of the liner while under a diameter-reducing stress is sufficiently smaller than the inside diameter of the pipe section that the liner may be readily drawn through the pipe section under diameter-reducing stress, and releasing the stress on the liner, thus allowing the liner to expand into contact with the inside wall of the pipe section. The rollers are driven at a rate sufficient to maintain the tensile stress on the pipe liner below the tensile yield limit of the polymer.

Description

1;~4~2~i~

IN-SITU METHOD FOR LINING PIPE
WITH POLYMERIC LINER
This invention relates to a method for lining tubular structures. More particularly, the invention relates to a method for lining tubular structures, for example pipe sections, with tubular liners of synthetic polymeric materials.
Metal pipes and pipes lined with ceramic and concrete materials are not satisfactory for handling many fluids which have corrosive or abrasive characteristics or both. Such pipes, even though coated internally with corrosion- or abrasion-resistant material, typically deteriorate in service with the passage of time, with a resultant increased risk of failure. If such failures should occur, the contents of the pipeline will escape, if the line is under pressure, and there is risk of damage to the environment and to other structures if corrosive, toxic or inflammable materials are being conveyed in the pipeline; at the very least the pipeline owner faces the loss of a certain amount of product as a result of such failures. A number of proposals have been made with the intent of overcoming this deficiency by inserting synthetic liner material into new pipelines prior to installation, or with greater difficulty, into existing underground pipeline systems.
United States Patent 3 856 905 of DO
Damson, issued 1974 December 24, discloses a process for lining a conduit with a plastic liner tube by radially compressing the tube at a temperature of about 100C to a diameter smaller than its original diameter without increasing the length of the tube, reducing the temperature of the tube to about room fix temperature, positioning the tube within the conduit, and heating the tube to a temperature of about 100C
to cause radial expansion of the tube within the conduit. Longitudinal elongation of the liner was avoided by supporting the liner in a rigid frame, or, where the liner was passed through a swaying die, by operating sets of feed rollers and take up rollers at the same longitudinal speed.
In United States Patent 3 959 424 of DO
Damson et at, issued 1976 May 25, a method of lining pipe with a thermoplastic liner was disclosed which included reducing the diameter of the liner without a substantial increase in the length of the liner, inserting the liner in the conduit and allowing the liner to expand by recovery within the plastic memory of the thermoplastic liner.
Canadian Patent 575 424 of J. F. Lontz et at discloses lining metal pipes with fluorocarbon polymer liners by sistering a polymeric liner of larger diameter than the pipe, cooling the liner, stretching the liner to reduce its diameter to slightly less than that of the pipe, placing the liner inside the pipe, and releasing the stretching force on the liner, optionally raising its temperature at the same time.
United States Patent 3 462 825 of G. R. Pope et at, issued 1969 August 26, discloses a process for lining a tubular member with a liner of fluorinated polymer by drawing the liner through a reduction die into the tubular member without application of heat, and releasing the liner, whereupon it expands into tight engagement with the inner wall of the member.
The patent states that the variables of wall thickness and the rate of pulling through the die have no influence on the process.

In the process disclosed in United Kingdom Patent 2 084 686~ of S. Muir, published 19~4 May 16, a roll stand of a type known in the art is used to roll-reduce polyolefin pipe having an outside diameter greater than the inside diameter of a pipe to be lined, to an outside diameter less than said inside diameter. After the diameter of the polyolefin pipe has been roll-reduced, and the length thereof increased, the polyolefin pipe liner is inserted into lo the pipe to be lined. The liner apparently remains in the reduced-diameter state without application of external force; there is no mention of tension being applied to the liner. The liner is then heated to a temperature between 100C and 120C so as to produce a reversion expansion to some 90 percent or more of the original outside diameter of the polyolefin pipe, thus fully engaging the inside wall of the pipe being lined. The disclosure indicates that the polyolefin pipes may be roll-reduced some 20 percent in outside diameter.
In cop ending Canadian application Serial Number 524 587r filed 1986 December 04, a process is disclosed in which the pulling end of the liner is fitted with a pulling head and the distal end is restrained to produce a longitudinal force tending to strain the liner. The diameter consequently reduces in an amount in accordance with Poisson's ratio; in the case of polyethylene, which exhibits a Poisson's ratio of about 0.45, an strain of 10 cm produces a diameter reduction of about 4.5 cm. The longitudinal force is maintained on the liner throughout the insertion step, and released to expand the liner after the liner is positioned inside the pipe section.

Most of the known methods of altering the diameter of a thermoplastic liner in order to insert it into a pipe section operate within the plastic range of strain in order to use the plastic memory of the liner, thus requiring either high pressure or the application of heat or a combination thereof to expand the inserted liner within a reasonable amount of time. In the method disclosed by Pope et at, the liner is pulled through a reduction die, causing a considerable frictional force against the motion of the liner through the die. If an attempt were made to insert long lengths of liner at a reasonably rapid rate into the pipe, the necessary force would be well above the tensile yield point of the liner material and the liner would deform irreversibly.
It has now been found that these and other difficulties known in the art may be overcome by using powered rollers to deform radially a liner of synthetic thermoplastic or thermosetting material within the elastic-plastic range of the liner, inserting the liner into a pipe section to be lined while maintaining the liner in the deformed state by the application of longitudinal or radial stress and thereafter releasing the liner from the stress to allow the liner to expand radially into tight contact with the inside wall of the pipe section being lined.
Accordingly, the present invention provides a method of installing a pipe liner of synthetic polymer in a pipe section, said method comprising in sequence:
(a) providing a pipe liner of synthetic polymer having an outer diameter from about 0.5 percent to 6 percent larger than the inside diameter of the pipe section, (b) passing said liner through at least one set of at least two diameter-reducing rollers adjusted so that the resultant outside diameter of said liner while in a reduced-diameter state is sufficiently smaller than the inside diameter of the pipe section that the liner readily passes through the pipe section and so that the diameter reduction of the liner is below the upper limit of the elastic-plastic range for the polymer of said pipe liner, and simultaneously inserting the liner into the pipe section, (c) positioning said pipe liner in the pipe section and simultaneously maintaining the liner in the reduced-diameter state by the application of a stress selected from the group consisting of radial stress, longitudinal stress and a combination of radial stress and longitudinal stress, and (d) releasing said stress in the liner, at least one set of said rollers being driven at a rate sufficient to maintain tensile stress in said liner during the insertion step at a value below the 5 tensile yield limit of said synthetic polymer.
The present invention further provides a method of installing a pipe liner of synthetic polymer in a pipe section, said method comprising in sequence:
(a) Providing a pipe liner of synthetic polymer having an outer diameter from about 0.5 percent to 6 percent larger than the inside diameter of the pipe section, (b) passing said liner under tension through at least one set of diameter-reducing rollers adjusted so that the resultant outside diameter of the liner while under tension is sufficiently smaller than the inside diameter of the pipe section that the liner readily passes through the pipe section and so that the diameter reduction of the liner is below the upper limit of the elastic-plastic range for the polymer of the pipe liner and simultaneously drawing the liner into the pipe section, (c) positioning the pipe liner in the pipe section while maintaining tension on the liner, and Id) releasing tension on the liner, at least one set of said rollers being driven at a lo rate sufficient to maintain tensile stress in said liner during the insertion step at a value below the tensile yield limit of said synthetic polymer.
The present invention also provides an apparatus for lining a pipeline section with a tubular liner of synthetic polymer, comprising:
(a) means for drawing said liner into said pipeline at a variable controlled rate, (b) at least one set of at least two rollers adapted for reducing the diameter of said liner by an amount from about 5 to 20 percent, said rollers being adapted to be mounted in registration with an end of said pipeline section, I means for controlling peripheral speed of said rollers such that the tensile stress on the liner is maintained at a value not exceeding the tensile yield limit of said synthetic polymer.

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The synthetic polymer of the pipe liner may be a thermoplastic or thermosetting polymer, provided that the polymer is sufficiently rigid at the ambient temperatures encountered in relining operations that it may be radially deformed to decrease its diameter, and hence increase its wall thickness and/or its length, without collapsing into a "doggone"
cross-section. Thermoplastic polymers suitable for use in the process of the invention include polyolefins, for example polyethylene, polypropylene or polybutylene, or a polyamide, for example nylon 6,6, rigid polyvinyl chloride or acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene polymer. Where the polymer is polyethylene, a preferred polymer is a homopolymer of ethylene or a copolymer of ethylene and at least one alpha-olefin of 4 to 10 carbon atoms. High-density polyethylene is an especially preferred thermoplastic.
Optionally, the synthetic polymer of the liner may be a mixture of polyolefin in a continuous phase, thermoplastic polymer incompatible therewith in a discontinuous phase, and a compatibilizer for the polyolefin and incompatible thermoplastic polymer.
Where the polymer present in a discontinuous phase is a so-called barrier resin, the pipe liner resulting therefrom exhibits improved barrier resistance to permeation.
Also suitable is a pipe liner comprising two different resin layers in a co-extruded composite, for example, a liner having an outer layer of polyethylene and an inner layer of a so-called barrier resin, the liner thereby showing increased resistance to permeation as discussed hereinabove.

~L24~

Thermosetting polymers in composite tubing suitable in the form of composite tubing for use in the process of the invention include rigid epoxy and polyester thermoses resins known in the art as being S useful for pipe.
The means used to reduce the diameter of the liner comprises at least one set of rollers having appropriately sized concave outer circumferential surfaces, the surfaces being in registration with each other and with the opening of the pipe section to be lined. Optionally, a lubricant suitable for wire-pulling may be used at the diameter-reducing rollers to improve the friction characteristics of the liner material as it passes through the rollers and the pipe section. Lubricant may be particularly useful when the rollers are used in pairs rather than sets of four, because there is a large difference in circumferential speed of the rollers between the central surface of smallest diameter and the edges which are of larger diameter. This speed differential may be minimized by increasing the diameter of the rollers or by arranging the rollers in sets of four.
Lubricants well known in the art may be used, for example Yellow 77, petroleum jelly, engine oil or transmission fluid. The rollers must not be so heavily lubricated that insufficient friction is available between rollers and liner to drive the liner; the adjustment of lubricant type and amount may be readily made by the person skilled in the art.
Prior to being reduced in diameter by the roller means disclosed herein, the pipe liner has an initial outside diameter from about 0.5 percent to 6 percent larger than the inside diameter of the pipe section, in order to assure an interference fit with foe g the pipe section after installation. Preferably where the liner is polyethylene, it has an initial outside diameter from about 1 to 3 percent larger than the inside diameter of the pipe section.
A plurality of sets of diameter-reducing rollers may be used. The use of up to at least three sets of rollers to reduce the diameter of the liner in stages is particularly preferred for relining large-diameter pipe, for example pipe of at least 20 cm (I in.) diameter, in which the liner is deformed by a large absolute amount, and in which therefore the amount of work or energy necessary to deform a given length of liner is consequently also large. If a plurality of roller sets is used, it is advantageous though not essential that they be adjusted so that the liner diameter is reduced equally in each roller set.
Pipe sections to be lined by the method of the invention may be of diameters commonly used in industrial and field operations, for example from about 12 to at least about 900 mm (0.5 to 36 inches);
preferred diameters are from about 50 mm to about 600 mm (2 to 24 inches) in nominal diameter.
The wall thickness of the liner is sufficiently large that the liner will not collapse when it is passed through the rollers, and sufficiently small that the energy required to reduce its diameter does not too greatly reduce the rate at which the liner may be fed through the rollers. A
preferred wall thickness range is from about one-thirtieth to about one-twelfth of the liner outside diameter; that is, a liner having a Standard Diameter Ratio SIR of about 12 to 30.

g _ Lowe It is critical that the amount of strain undergone by the pipe liner in radial compression be below the upper limit of the elastic range and that the amount of strain in longitudinal tension be below the tensile yield point for the particular synthetic polymer selected for use as the liner. If a thermoplastic is selected, then the term "elastic"
includes both the fully elastic range and the elastic-plastic range, which will be defined below.
As is well-known in the art, no thermoplastic material exhibits complete recovery of a deformation regardless of how small; the phenomenon is called plastic creep, and is influenced by, among other things, the amount of elongation, the time the material is held in the elongated state, and the temperature of the thermoplastic specimen. Nevertheless, thermoplastic materials exhibit substantially complete recovery of deformation if the deformation is small and the time during which the material is deformed is short, especially at temperatures well below their softening points. In the case of high-density polyethylene materials, the substantially fully elastic range of strain at room temperature over a short time is from zero to about 7 percent; above 7 percent strain and below the fully plastic range, the materials exhibit a combination of elastic and plastic properties such that the total recovery upon removal of the stress is greater than 7 percent but less than the original amount of strain applied to the plastic material.
This range, herein defined as the elastic-plastic range, for polyethylene has an upper limit of about 18 to 20 percent, depending upon the grade of polyethylene, the temperature, time and other factors. As the strain increases above the elastic-plastic range, in the fully plastic range, a test sample will increasingly exhibit permanent deformation. Thus the total reduction in diameter at the rolls should be no more than about 20 percent where a polyethylene liner is used depending upon the considerations mentioned above. If other thermoplastic polymers are used in the liner, the elastic-plastic properties of such thermoplastic polymers will govern the amount of permitted reduction in diameter. Preferably, the liner is reduced in diameter by an amount from about 5 to 20 percent.
It the liner consists of a thermosetting polymer, the amount of reduction and expansion selected are commensurate with the elastic characteristics of the particular polymer used, thermosetting materials exhibiting substantially no -plastic creep.
In the embodiment of the invention using tension to maintain the reduced diameter of the pipe liner, sufficient stress is maintained on the pipe liner throughout the insertion qt~p to maintain the liner in the reduced-diameter state. Preferably, the longitudinal stress in the liner is maintained a least at about 2.1 Ma (390 psi) and below the tensile yield point of the polymer as described above.
In an alternative embodiment of the invention, the liner may be maintained in the reduced-diameter state by providing external fluid pressure around the liner during insertion. In such an embodiment of the method, the diameter-reducing rollers are placed immediately adjacent the insertion end of the pipe section. The insertion end of the liner is sealed prior to inserting it in the pipe section and the pipe section is fitted with a fluid-tight seal at the insertion end of the pipe section which will allow the liner to pass through into the pipe section while preventing loss of pressurizing fluid from the pipe section. The pipe section is pressurized internally with fluid, the liner is inserted into the pipe section simultaneously and the fluid is simultaneously allowed to escape as the liner is inserted, at a rate comparable to the rate at which the liner is inserted through the seal. A small pulling force may be applied to the liner to prevent it from buckling as it is inserted. The fluid pressure provides a radial compressive stress which maintains the liner in a reduced-diameter state.
After the liner is fully inserted, the fluid pressure is released to allow the liner to expand and come into contact with the inner surface of the pipe section.
The use of the close radial tolerances of the invention and maintaining the radial deformation of the liner within the elastic-plastic range ensure that when the stress on the pipe liner is released, the liner will expand to conform tightly to the inner wall of the pipe section. Thus it is unnecessary to expand the liner by pressurizing, heating or a combination of pressurizing and heating the liner in order to obtain an interference fit of the liner in the pipe section.
The clearance between the liner of reduced diameter and the pipe section, expressed as the ratio of the outside diameter of the liner after passing through the rollers to the inside diameter of the pipe section, may be from about 84 percent to 96 percent.
In small pipe sections, the necessary clearance is greater than in larger pipes, such that the preferred reduced diameter of a liner for a nominal 2-inch pipe (actual old. 60.3 mm) is 84 to 90 percent of the inside diameter of the pipe section; in nominal 3-inch (actual old. 88.9 mm) and larger pipe sections, the preferred reduced diameter of the liner is about 90 to 96 percent of the inside diameter of the pipe section. For in-shop installation of pipe liners according to the method of the invention, closer tolerances may be used.
In order to prevent permanent deformation of the pipe liner in the reduced-diameter state, the insertion step is of a limited duration, preferably no more than about 2 hours. This time depends upon the temperature of the liner during the insertion step, the molecular weight of the polymer and the amount of stress on the liner, among other things.
The lining operation may be carried out at temperatures from about -40C to ~45C, preferably from about -10C to +30C.
The rate of inserting the liner into the pipe section is preferably at least 8 main and may be up to at least about 30 main depending upon the ambient conditions and the configuration of the liner.
The length of a section of liner that may be installed in a single pull by the method of the invention is up to at least 500 to 800 m and may be over 1 km under favorable circumstances, for example in a reasonably clean pipeline having few tight-radius bends.
Embodiments of the present invention will be described in greater detail with the aid of the accompanying drawings in which:
Figure 1 is a sectional view of apparatus for carrying out an embodiment of the process of the present invention showing a liner of thermoplastic material being roll-reduced and drawn into a pipe section;

Figure 2 is a cross-sectional view of rollers adapted for reducing the diameter of a pipe liner according to an embodiment of the present invention;
Figure 3 is a sectional view of an apparatus adapted for carrying out an embodiment of the process of the invention using fluid pressure to maintain the liner in a reduced-diameter state; and Figure 4 is a cross-sectional view of a set of four rollers adapted for reducing the diameter of a liner according to an embodiment of the invention.

lo Referring to Figure 1, a pipeline section 1 is shown being lined with a pipe liner of synthetic polymer shown in its original diameter 2. Diameter-reducing rollers 10 and 11 driven by drive means (shown in Figure 2) and fabricated from non-resilient material, for example stainless steel, are mounted on mounting frame 16 removably fastened by any convenient means, for example bolts 5, 6 to flange 4 which is in turn fixed, preferably by welding, to pipeline section 1. The rolling surface of rollers 10 and 11, shown in detail in Figure 2, is concave semi-circular in cross-section, having depressed center portions 12 and 13 and protruding rims 14, aye and 15, aye. When brought into registration with each other and with the opening of pipe section 1, the rolling surfaces of the rollers define a substantially circular area through which the pipe liner 3 is passed, and the rims 14 and aye are in close proximity to the rims lo and aye respectively, for example within 1 mm of each other.

DC-9212~

i.~4~2~i2 The rims are generally not in tight contact in order to avoid undue wear on the roller mounting means, for example axles 27, 28 and their respective bearings (not shown). The diameter of the circular area is selected such that the diameter of pipe liner 3 will be between 85 percent and 95 percent of the inside diameter of the pipe section 1, in order to allow at least a minimum clearance during the drawing step. As discussed above the liner 3 maintains its reduced diameter while it is under tension. Generally, the pipe section 1 and the liner 3 are of circular cross-section, although if the pipe section 1 is non-circular, for example elliptical, the liner 2 may be of corresponding cross-sectionO The diameter-reducing rollers generally are not intended to alter the shape of the liner's original cross-section; the liner is not folded over, for example into a dog-bone shape. In certain circumstances, however, the diameter-reducing rollers may be used to alter a circular liner to a non circular cross-section, for example in order to line a pipe of elliptical cross-section.
Figure 2 illustrates in detail the configuration of the rollers and a portion of an exemplary drive mechanism therefore The rollers 10, 11 are mounted on axles 27, 28 positioned in frames 16, aye so that the rims 14, aye of roller 10 are in close proximity to the rims 15, aye of roller 11.
Synchronizing gears 17, 18 are mounted coccal with rollers 10, 11 and mesh with each other so that rollers 10, 11 counter-rotate at equal peripheral speed. Synchronizing gear 17 is driven by gear 19 which is in turn driven by variable-speed drive 32.
It is essential that either the roller drive mechanism foe or the wire line unit be capable of variable speed operation, in order that the tension of the liner during the insertion step be maintained at an appropriate value below the tensile yield limit of the synthetic polymer forming the liner. Generally, the speeds of both the rollers and the wire line unit described below are variable. Drive 32 may be electrically variable or hydraulic, and is preferably hydraulically operated. Hydraulic motors are advantageous in that they can be operated at a given torque relatively easily.
In preparation for lining a pipe section, a pig (not shown) is propelled by well-known methods, for example by applying fluid pressure, through the pipe section so that communication with the pulling end of the pipe section may be accomplished by means of a pulling device, for example wire line 21. A small portion of pipe liner 2, shown in Figure 1, is passed through rollers 10 and 11, to reduce the diameter of that portion of liner. The liner is attached to wire line 21 by wire line attachment device 20, which may be of a type generally known in the art;
preferably, the wire line attachment device is of a diameter equivalent to the reduced diameter of the liner after passing through the diameter-reduction rollers. A wire line unit of a type known in the art (not shown) is attached to wire line 21 and is adapted to measure the tension on wire line 21 in order to monitor the tensile stress on liner 3. Frame 16 comprising rollers 10, 11 is mounted on flange 4. All of the pipe liner 3 subsequently drawn into pipe section 1 is passed through rollers 10 and 11 which reduce its diameter sufficiently to allow the pipe liner 3 to be conveniently drawn through pipe section ~4~X~i~

1. The work necessary to reduce the diameter of the pipe liner from large diameter 2 to small diameter 3 would cause a considerable tension upon the pipe liner between the rollers 10 and 11 and the wire line attachment device 20 if the rollers were not driven at an appropriate speed; consequently, the rate of rotation of rollers 10, 11 is adjusted in combination with the rate of pull and the tension on wire line 21 so that the longitudinal tensile stress in the liner is not allowed to rise above the yield point of the polymer of the liner, and to provide a safety factor, preferably not above two-thirds of the yield point.
Should this level of stress be exceeded, the liner may fail during insertion and be difficult to retrieve.
While under tensile or radial stress tending to maintain the reduced diameter of pipe liner 3, liner 3 does not revert to its former diameter as at reference number 2 in Figure 1, but remains of such a diameter as to be conveniently drawn through pipeline section 1. In accordance with Poisson's ratio which is about 0.45 for high-density polyethylene, for each 1.0 percent reduction in the diameter of the polymeric pipe liner by reducing rolls 10 and 11, the length of the section of pipe liner increases by about 0.45 percent. In contrast, reducing the diameter of the liner by merely elongating the liner would require an elongation of 1.0 percent for each 0.45 percent reduction in the diameter; thus the method of the invention requires only about one-quarter of the elongation that would be required if stretching were the only means used to reduce the diameter of the liner.

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Referring to Figure 3, an embodiment of the process is shown in which external fluid pressure is maintained on the liner during the insertion step.
Wire line attachment device 20 is attached to the insertion end of the liner 3 in such a manner as to be pressure-tight, for example by fusion welding where the liner is thermoplastic. The liner is inserted through fluid-tight seal 26 of conventional design fixed at the insertion end of the pipe section 1, after passing through the diameter-reducing rolls 14, 15 as described herein before. Sufficient pulling force to prevent liner 3 from changing shape and impeding its free movement through pipe section 1 is applied by wire line 21 through wire line attachment device 20. At the distal end of pipe section 1 is fixed a fluid-tight cap 30 on flange 31. Cap 30 includes a draw-off line 23 controlled by a valve 24.
As pipe liner 3 is inserted into the pipe section 1, the rate of fluid emitted from pipe section 1 is controlled by adjusting valve 24 to maintain the appropriate pressure external to pipe liner 3 such that pipe liner 3 will remain in the reduced-diameter static Wire line 21 passes out the end of pipe section 1 to an appropriate pulling device and in order to maintain fluid pressure inside pipe section 1, end seal 25 retained by split cap 30 closely fits around wire line 21. When pipe liner 3 is fully inserted, for example into contact with end plate 22 of cap 30, cap 30 and seal 25 on pipe liner 3 are removed to eliminate the fluid pressure and pipe liner 3 is allowed to expand into contact with the inner walls of pipe section 1.

~24~

If the liner is inserted while maintaining radial stress to retain the reduced diameter, then the source of radial stress is removed when the liner has been positioned inside the pipe section. Thereupon the liner undergoes a reversion process in the same way as it does when tension is removed, to about the same degree of diameter increase and longitudinal shrinkage.
Sufficient pipe liner 3 is allowed to protrude from the pipeline section 1 that, as the liner retracts longitudinally in the stress-releasing step, the end of the liner will not recede inside the pipe line section. If free to expand fully, pipe liner 3 would revert almost completely to its previous diameter, but because its size is closely controlled with respect to the internal size of pipeline section 1, pipe liner 3 assumes an interference fit with pipeline section 1. The reversion will be substantially complete after an interval of about 0.1 to 24 hours.
After reversion is substantially complete, joints are prepared at both ends of the liner by conventional methods, for example by attaching stub ends, or by rolling a flange using a mandrel or by using O-rings or other known jointing methods. In a preferred method, a stub end is attached to the liner as follows: the liner is marked at a point opposite the pipeline flange to indicate the point of neutral stress in the liner; a small portion of the liner sufficient to provide working room for a butt fusion device, generally about 30 to 60 cm, is first drawn out of the pipe line; the liner is cut at a point such that a flange to be attached on the stub end will be at the location of the mark; the flange is butt 12~,~

welded onto the cleaned cut end of the liner; the liner is caused to retract into the pipeline until the liner flange is flush with the flange on the pipeline. Generally, force must be used to cause the liner to retract fully into the pipe section. In many cases manual force is sufficient to urge the liner into place; if mechanical advantage is necessary, conventional methods may be used to apply insertion force upon the liner; for example, a mating flange may be placed on the outer face of the liner flange, and tightened by through-bolts to push the liner flange into position against the pipe flange.
The rollers for the reduction of the diameter of the liner may conveniently be mounted in pairs, as are rollers 10 and 11 shown in Figure 1.
Advantageously, each roller set may comprise three or four or Gore rollers, four being an especially preferred number; the use of numerous rollers in a roller set, while more costly than a pair of rollers, has the advantage that less friction is created by slippage between the rolling surfaces of the rollers and the pipe liner passing through them due to the difference in relative surface speeds of the rollers between the center portions 12 and 13 and the rim portions 14, aye and 15, aye, in Figure 2.
At least one of the roller sets must be driven by rotational drive means known in the art, for example geared drives. All rollers in a set are driven. The speed of the roller drives is adjusted to maintain a desired level of tension on the liner as it is drawn into the pipe section. By driving the rollers at the controlled rate heroin. described, the rate of drawing the liner into the pipe section is substantially raised beyond that available by prior ~L24~.2~,~

art methods without increasing the tension on the liner.
Without committing to a specific technical explanation of the invention, it is thought that the amount of work done on the liner per unit time in order to reduce its diameter is proportional to the speed at which the reduction takes place, other things being equal. Since in prior art methods involving reduction of the liner by a die the work is entirely supplied by a pulling force on the liner, the tension necessary to sustain a given diameter decrease in a liner of a given wall thickness and diameter is also proportional to the rate of insertion of the liner into the pipe. Further, the frictional force resisting the movement of the liner into the pipe is proportional to the length of the liner drawn into the pipe. Thus at high rates of insertion of long liner sections, the tension on the liner may readily increase beyond the tensile yield limit of the liner and cause permanent damage to the liner if prior art methods were used. In the process of the invention, the work necessary to reduce the liner diameter is supplied largely by the roller sets, and the pulling tension is thereby limited to the amount necessary to overcome the frictional resistance to pulling the liner through the pipe section.
Figure 4 illustrates an embodiment of the invention utilizing a set of four rollers to reduce the diameter of the pipe liner. Rollers 50, 51, 52, 53 are mounted each having its axis at a right angle to the axis of the adjacent roller such that depressed center portions 54, 55, 56, 57 together form a circular passage 59 which reduces the diameter of liner 3 as it it pulled through passage 59. The ~'~412~

roller axles are mounted rotatable in frame 58. Bevel jurists 60, 61, 62 drive rollers 50, 51, 52, 53 such that the four circumferences of the rollers move at equal speed in the same direction at passage 59. One of the jurists is driven by bevel gear 63 which in turn is driven by variable-speed drive 64. It is essential that all rollers in a set be driven.
Example 1 An eight-inch nominal diameter steel pipeline section having an inside diameter of 196.8 mm (7.749 inches) was lined with a pipe liner manufactured from ECLAIR 35B polyethylene resin and having a wall thickness of 6.40 mm (0.252 inches), and an outside diameter of 201.7 mm (7.940 inches), which was 2.5 percent larger than the inside diameter of the pipeline section. Thus the cross-sectional area of the liner before being radially compressed by the rollers was 39.27 cm2 (6.09 in). The inside surface of the pipe was oxidized and rusty, but not so severely corroded as to affect the pressure capability of the pipe. When the relining procedure was carried out, the ambient temperature was about 20C and the temperature of the buried steel pipe was about 10C.
Three pairs of rollers were arranged at the entrance to the pipeline section, having a circumferential cross-section such that the liner, after passing through the rollers, exhibited an outside diameter of 177.8 mm (7.000 inches) while under tension; thus the rollers caused the diameter of the liner to decrease by 11.8 percent. A wire line passing through the pipeline section was attached to the leading end of the pipe liner and the liner was pulled through the pipeline section at an average rate of about 25 main the tension on the wire line was maintained and ~24~126~

measured throughout the pulling procedure. All rollers were driven by a hydraulic motor and jurist at a rate such that the tension on the liner was limited to no more than 24 500 N (5500 lbf), corresponding to a tensile stress on the polyethylene of the liner of 6.29 Ma (912 psi). Had the insertion rate of 25 main been maintained using only tension on the liner to draw the liner through the rollers and into the pipe, the liner would have been subjected to a stress beyond the tensile yield limit of the polyethylene. The pipeline section was 430 m long.
Individual sections of pipe liner had been butt welded using a conventional fusion joining machine and removing the external bead of polyethylene created by the joining machine, to produce an essentially unitary liner of the required length. The rollers were lubricated with a small amount of Yellow 77 lubricant. At the end of the pulling procedure, when the liner had been fully inserted, liner having an original length of about 436 m had been used.
Approximately 55 m of liner protruded from the pulling end of the lined pipe section; at the insertion end, the liner was not cut from the source of pipe liner material. The tension on the wire line was gradually released, and within 10 seconds, 15 m of the liner had receded into the pipeline section; the liner continued to recede more and more slowly and its motion had completely stopped 8 hours later by which time 25 m of liner had receded into the pipeline section at the pulling end and 1 m had receded at the insertion end.
Stub-end flanges were attached at both ends of the liner by conventional methods to allow pressure testing and subsequent coupling of the pipeline section. During the pressure test, there was substantially no issuance of air or water prom the bleed holes drilled near each end of the pipeline section; thus it was clear that the liner had expanded by reversion into virtually complete contact with the inner wall of the pipeline section prior to the application of any internal pressure.

Example 2 A four-inch nominal diameter steel pipeline section about 600 m long having an inside diameter of 102.3 mm (4.026 inches), was lined with a pipe liner manufactured from ECLAIR 35B polyethylene resin having a wall thickness of 5.34 mm (0.210 inches), and an outside diameter of 10509 mm (4.170 inches), which was 3.6 percent larger than the inside diameter of the pipeline section. The condition of the pipe and the ambient conditions were similar to those of Example 1. Two pairs of rollers were arranged at the entrance to the pipeline section, similarly to the rollers of on Example 1, having a circumferential cross-section sun that the liner, after passing through the rollers, exhibited an outside diameter of 90.93 mm (3.580 inches) while under tension, thus reducing its diameter by 14.2 percent. The liner was pulled through the pipeline section by a wire line at an average rate of about 30 main the tension on the wire line was maintained and measured throughout the pulling procedure. All rollers were driven by a hydraulic motor and jurist at a rate such that the tension on the liner was limited to no more than 20 000 N (4500 lbf), corresponding to a tensile stress on the polyethylene of the liner of 11.9 Ma (1724 psi). Had the insertion rate of 30 main been maintained using only tension on the liner to draw the I

liner through the rollers and into the pipe, the liner would have been subjected towards the end of the pull to a tension of about 26 700 N, corresponding to a stress in the liner of about 15.9 Ma, beyond the tensile yield limit of the polyethylene. Other conditions of the test were similar to the conditions in Example 1. Stub-end flanges were attached by conventional methods, and the lined pipe was successfully pressure tested and coupled into the pipeline system.
The method of the invention exhibits a number of useful benefits not available from prior art methods. An important advantage is that the entire lining operation may be undertaken at ambient temperature; it is not necessary to supply large quantities of heated fluid, e.g. water, in order to cause reversion of the liner into tight contact with the pipeline section and therefore the method of the invention enjoys a considerable cost advantage over other methods. In contrast to prior art roll-reducing and die-reducing methods, a long section of liner may be drawn into a pipeline at a rapid rate without causing the tensile stress on the liner to rise into the range in which it will permanently deform the liner or cause it to fail at the wire line attachment device. A further advantage of the method of the invention is that the major portion of the expansion of the liner occurs almost immediately after the diameter-reducing stress is removed, e.g. after the tension is removed from the wire line; thus a lining crew may quickly prepare many kilometers of lined in-situ pipeline sections. A still further advantage is that the method of the invention permits a liner of about 800 m in length to be inserted in a single pull, ~:4~2~,~

and if conditions are favorable, that is if the inside surface of the pipe is reasonably clean and has few sharp bends, as much as one kilometer under favorable conditions; therefore it permits digging S relatively few holes at which the buried pipeline must be exposed and broken. Additionally, compared to lining methods in which the liner is merely stretched to decrease its diameter, the method of the invention requires about one-quarter the amount of liner stretching because of the manner in which the thermoplastic polymer behaves in accordance with Poisson's ratio.

Claims (26)

The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
1. A method of installing a pipe liner of synthetic polymer in a pipe section, said method comprising in sequence:
(a) providing a pipe liner of synthetic polymer having an outer diameter from about 0.5 percent to 6 percent larger than the inside diameter of the pipe section, (b) passing said liner through at least one set of at least two diameter-reducing rollers to reduce the outside diameter of the liner without flexing the liner, the rollers being adjusted so that the resultant outside diameter of said liner while in a reduced-diameter state is sufficiently smaller than the inside diameter of the pipe section that the liner readily passes through the pipe section and so that the diameter reduction of the liner is below the upper limit of the elastic-plastic range for the polymer of said pipe liner, and simultaneously inserting the liner into the pipe section, (c) positioning said pipe liner in the pipe section while maintaining the liner in the reduced-diameter state by the application of a stress selected from the group consisting of radial stress, longitudinal stress and a combination of radial stress and longitudinal stress, and (d) releasing said stress in the liner, at least one set of said rollers being driven at a rate sufficient to maintain tensile stress in said liner during the insertion step at a value below the tensile yield limit of said synthetic polymer.
2. A method of installing a pipe liner of synthetic polymer in a pipe section, said method comprising:
(a) providing a pipe liner of synthetic polymer having an outer diameter from about 0.5 percent to 6 percent larger than the inside diameter of the pipe section, (b) passing said liner under longitudinal tensile stress through at least one set of at least two diameter-reducing rollers to reduce the outside diameter of the liner without flexing the liner, the rollers being adjusted so that the resultant outside diameter of the liner while under said stress is sufficiently smaller than the inside diameter of the pipe section that the liner readily passes through the pipe section and so that the diameter reduction of the liner is below the upper limit of the elastic-plastic range for the polymer of the pipe liner and simultaneously drawing the liner into the pipe section, (c) positioning said pipe liner in the pipe section while maintaining sufficient longitudinal tensile stress on the liner to maintain the liner in the reduced diameter state, and (d) releasing said tensile stress on the pipe liner, at least one set of said rollers being driven at a rate sufficient to maintain said tensile stress in said liner during the insertion step at a value at least sufficient to maintain the liner in the reduced-diameter state and below the tensile yield limit of said synthetic polymer.
3. A method according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein said pipe liner has an outer diameter from 1.0 percent to 3.0 percent larger than the inside diameter of the pipe section.
4. A method according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein said synthetic pipe liner is polyethylene.
5. A method according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein said synthetic pipe liner is high-density polyethylene.
6. A method according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein said synthetic pipe liner is polyamide.
7. A method according to Claim 2, wherein said set of diameter-reducing rollers comprises at least three rollers.
8. A method according to Claim 7, wherein said pipe liner is passed through a plurality of sets of diameter-reducing rollers.
9. A method according to Claim 1 or Claim 8, wherein said roller sets comprise two individual rollers having a peripheral concave rolling surface substantially semi-circular in cross-section.
10. A method according to Claim 8, wherein said roller sets each comprise four rollers.
11. A method according to Claim 10, wherein said diameter-reducing rollers comprise at least two roller sets.
12. A method according to Claim 10, wherein said diameter-reducing rollers comprise three roller sets.
13. A method according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein said pipe liner is circular in cross-section.
14. A method according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, carried out at a temperature from about -10°C to +30°C.
15. A method according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein the pipe section is from about 50 mm to 200 mm in diameter.
16. A method according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein during the diameter-reducing step the diameter of the pipe liner is reduced by no more than 20 percent.
17. A method according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein said rollers are driven at a rate sufficient to insert said liner at a rate at least 8 m/min.
18. A method according to Claim 1, wherein said liner is maintained in the reduced-diameter state by the application of radial compressive stress maintained by fluid pressure external to said pipe liner.
19 A method as claimed in Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein the time during which the pipe liner is allowed to remain-in-the reduced-diameter state is no more than about 2 hours.
20. A method according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein said rollers are driven by a variable-speed drive.
21. A method according to Claim 19, wherein said variable speed drive is by hydraulic motor.
22. Apparatus for lining a pipeline section with a tubular liner of synthetic polymer, comprising:
(a) means for drawing said liner into said pipeline at a variable controlled rate, (b) at least one set of at least two rollers adapted for reducing outside diameter of the liner without flexing the liner, said rollers being adapted for reducing the diameter of said liner by an amount from about 5 to 20 percent, said rollers being adapted to be mounted in registration with an end of said pipeline section, (c) means for controlling peripheral speed of said rollers such that the tensile stress on the liner is maintained at a value not exceeding the tensile yield limit of said synthetic polymer.
23. Apparatus according to Claim 22 wherein said means for controlling peripheral speed of said rollers is driven by a hydraulic motor.
24. Apparatus according to Claim 22 further including means for applying radial or longitudinal stress to the liner to maintain the liner in the reduced diameter state.
25. Apparatus according to claim 24 wherein said means for applying longitudinal stress is said means for draying said liner into said pipeline.
26. Apparatus according to claim 25 wherein said means for applying radial stress comprises means for applying fluid pressure external to the liner.
CA000546507A 1987-09-10 1987-09-10 In-situ method for lining pipe with thermoplastic liner Expired CA1241262A (en)

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Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5180458A (en) * 1990-05-02 1993-01-19 Du Pont Canada, Inc. Method of lining of metallic pipe using a plurality of concentric flexible tubes of thermoplastic polymer
US5205886A (en) * 1990-05-02 1993-04-27 Du Pont Canada Inc. Method of lining metallic pipe using concentric tubes of thermoplastic polymer and tear resistant material
US5306449A (en) * 1980-01-25 1994-04-26 Brittain Perry N Process for lining high pressure pipeline
US5320388A (en) * 1988-02-25 1994-06-14 Miller Pipeline Service Corporation Well tubing liner system
US5340524A (en) * 1991-01-22 1994-08-23 Pipe Rehab International, Inc. Variable angular insertion method for lining tubular members
US5551484A (en) * 1994-08-19 1996-09-03 Charboneau; Kenneth R. Pipe liner and monitoring system
US5626801A (en) * 1991-03-21 1997-05-06 Pipe Rehab International, Inc. Method of lining a host pipe with a liner by diameter reduction with angularly offset rollers
US7575789B2 (en) 2003-12-17 2009-08-18 E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Coated pipes for conveying oil
US8039073B2 (en) 2005-12-20 2011-10-18 E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Pipe preformed liner comprising metal powder
US8211497B2 (en) 2004-04-06 2012-07-03 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Process for forming a nonstick surface on the interior surface of a pipe

Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5306449A (en) * 1980-01-25 1994-04-26 Brittain Perry N Process for lining high pressure pipeline
US5320388A (en) * 1988-02-25 1994-06-14 Miller Pipeline Service Corporation Well tubing liner system
US5180458A (en) * 1990-05-02 1993-01-19 Du Pont Canada, Inc. Method of lining of metallic pipe using a plurality of concentric flexible tubes of thermoplastic polymer
US5205886A (en) * 1990-05-02 1993-04-27 Du Pont Canada Inc. Method of lining metallic pipe using concentric tubes of thermoplastic polymer and tear resistant material
US5340524A (en) * 1991-01-22 1994-08-23 Pipe Rehab International, Inc. Variable angular insertion method for lining tubular members
US5645784A (en) * 1991-01-22 1997-07-08 Pipe Rehab International, Inc. Diameter reduction insertion method for lining tubular members
US5626801A (en) * 1991-03-21 1997-05-06 Pipe Rehab International, Inc. Method of lining a host pipe with a liner by diameter reduction with angularly offset rollers
US5551484A (en) * 1994-08-19 1996-09-03 Charboneau; Kenneth R. Pipe liner and monitoring system
US7575789B2 (en) 2003-12-17 2009-08-18 E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Coated pipes for conveying oil
US7871684B2 (en) 2003-12-17 2011-01-18 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Coated pipes for conveying oil
US8383199B2 (en) 2003-12-17 2013-02-26 E. I. Dupont De Nemours And Company Process for lining the interior surface of a metal pipe for conveying oil
US8776837B2 (en) 2003-12-17 2014-07-15 E I Du Pont De Nemours And Company Coated pipes for conveying oil
US8211497B2 (en) 2004-04-06 2012-07-03 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Process for forming a nonstick surface on the interior surface of a pipe
US8685493B2 (en) 2004-04-06 2014-04-01 E I Du Pont De Nemours And Company Process for forming a non-stick surface on the interior surface of a pipe
US8039073B2 (en) 2005-12-20 2011-10-18 E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Pipe preformed liner comprising metal powder

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