Research on a High-Temperature Electromagnetic Ultrasonic Circumferential Guided Wave Sensor Based on Halbach Array
High-temperature pipelines, as core facilities in the fields of petrochemical and power, are constantly exposed to extreme working conditions ranging from 450 to 600 °C, facing risks of stress corrosion, creep damage, and other defects. Traditional shutdown inspections are time-consuming and costly....
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| Main Authors: | , , , , |
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
MDPI AG
2025-03-01
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| Series: | Micromachines |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/2072-666X/16/4/367 |
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| Summary: | High-temperature pipelines, as core facilities in the fields of petrochemical and power, are constantly exposed to extreme working conditions ranging from 450 to 600 °C, facing risks of stress corrosion, creep damage, and other defects. Traditional shutdown inspections are time-consuming and costly. Meanwhile, existing electromagnetic acoustic transducers (EMATs) are restricted by their high-temperature tolerance (≤500 °C) and short-term stability (effective working duration < 5 min). This paper proposes a high-frequency circumferential guided wave (CLamb wave) EMAT based on a Halbach permanent magnet array. Through magnetic circuit optimization (Halbach array) and multi-layer insulation design, it enables continuous and stable detection on the surface of 600 °C pipelines for 10 min. The simulations revealed that the Halbach array increased the magnetic flux density by 1.4 times and the total displacement amplitude by 2 times at a magnet’s large lift-off (9 mm). The experimental results show that the internal temperature of the sensor remained stable below 167 °C at 600 °C. It was capable of detecting the smallest defect of a φ3 mm half-hole (depth half of the wall thickness), with a signal attenuation rate of only 0.32%/min. The signal amplitude of Q235 pipelines under high-temperature short-term detection (<5 min) was 1.5 times higher than that at room temperature. However, material degradation under high temperature led to insufficient long-term stability. This study breaks through the bottleneck of long-term detection of high-temperature EMATs, providing a new scheme for efficient online detection of high-temperature pipelines. |
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| ISSN: | 2072-666X |