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Nondestructive Testing |
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NDT INSPECTION
& TESTING LTD |
24 May 2006
NDT Inspection & Testing Provides Thorough Shut-Down Health
Check For Heating Cylinders At Bridgewater Paper
NDT
Inspection & Testing has recently completed its latest
annual shutdown inspection of large diameter, heating cylinders
at the Ellesmere Port complex of the Bridgewater Paper Company.
The inspection is carried out within a 36 hour shut-down window
and employs a number of ndt techniques to assess the condition
and functionality of these vital production assets.
Bridgewater
Paper is a company within the Canadian multi-national Abtibi
Consolidated Inc. and produces newsprint at its Ellesmere
Port site, predominantly from recycled paper. In operation,
the used paper is shredded and mixed with water and then re-pulped,
ensuring that all foreign bodies, such as staples, plastics
and other contaminants, are removed. It is then de-inked before
passing to the paper making machine where the web is created
on the forming wire. Once the web is established, it is then
necessary to remove the entrained water. Some water is removed
by natural drainage and by rollers in the press section but
the most significant percentage is removed in the dryer section,
where heated cylinders evaporate the moisture to less than
10%, before the sheet is calendered or "ironed"
to its final thickness in the calendar stack.
The 14 cylinders in the dryer section are each around 25feet
in length and 5feet in diameter and are steam-filled to provide
the necessary evaporative heat. As a result, they are subject
to internal corrosion because of the wet steam, as well as
possible cracking caused by the thermal stresses.
To ensure that the cylinders continue to function without
disrupting production and also for safety reasons, they are
comprehensively inspected during every annual shut-down. For
the past three years this vital task has been carried out
by NDT
Inspection & Testing, using a range of relevant inspection
techniques.
Specifically, magnetic particle inspection is applied to
both inside and outside cylinder surfaces to detect any surface
breaking cracks, while ultrasonic time of flight diffraction
allows comprehensive volumetric inspection. At the same time,
conventional ultrasonic inspection is used to monitor cylinder
wall thickness to check for any corrosion. Advanced electro-magnetic
techniques have also been used in the past to corroborate
ultrasonic findings.
As the cylinders are technically classed as pressure vessels,
it also necessary for any inspection procedures to be assessed
and validated by an authorised third party. This year, the
inspection procedures were first audited by Zurich Risk Services
at NDT
Inspection & Testing's Queeensferry base and then
successfully re-audited on-site.
NDT
Inspecting & Testing is one of the UK's largest dedicated
inspection service providers and believes in working closely
with customers to understand and address their needs in a
reliable, quality-compliant and cost efficient fashion by
using the most appropriate technology to best effect. Its
field services division offers a wide range of conventional
inspection technology, including site
radiography, supported by specialist techniques such as
TOFD,
remote field eddy current inspection, remote visual tube
inspection and IRIS
ultrasonic testing. The company also provides dedicated
and qualified radiographic testing services to the aerospace
sector and carries both Nadcap and UKAS accreditation at each
of its three strategically located sites in the UK.
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