Abstract

AbstractCathodic protection allied to a polymeric coating is one of the most employed techniques to protect buried steel pipelines against corrosion. Nevertheless, cathodic disbondment, a phenomenon associated with such protection in high‐performance coatings such as (three‐layer polyethylene [3LPE]), still concerns the oil and gas segment regarding pipeline integrity. The present work was part of a Program of Integrity Management and studied in field‐like conditions the influence of cathodic potential, type of soil and coating system on the coating disbondment of buried pipelines for 450 days. The coating systems herein studied simulated the patching between aged (coal tar) and new coatings (3LPE), a standard procedure during damaged pipeline repair. Results pointed out that the combination between aged (coal tar) and new coatings (3LPE) in a pipe segment reduced coating disbondment when compared to the systems where 3LPE was the sole type of coating. Moreover, it was shown that more cathodic potentials (<−1100 mV) and the aggressiveness of the industrial soil herein tested induced disbondment diameters as high as 15.5 mm.

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