The
fact that electric arc could operate was known for over a 100 years. The first
ever underwater welding was carried out by British Admiralty – Dockyard for
sealing leaking ship rivets below the water line. Underwater welding is an
important tool for underwater fabrication works. In 1946, special waterproof
electrodes were developed in Holland by ‘Van der Willingen’. In recent years
the number of offshore structures including oil drilling rigs, pipelines,
platforms are being installed significantly. Some of these structures will
experience failures of its elements during normal usage and during unpredicted
occurrences like storms, collisions. Any repair method will require the use of
underwater welding.
Sumber : http://www2.wisd.net/archive/industrialtech/WELDING/WELDLESSONS/UNDERWATERWELDING.htm
Classification
Underwater welding can be classified as
1) Wet Welding
2) Dry Welding
In wet welding the welding is performed underwater, directly exposed to the wet
environment. In dry welding, a dry chamber is created near the area to be
welded and the welder does the job by staying inside the chamber.
WET WELDING
Wet Welding indicates that welding is performed underwater, directly exposed to
the wet environment. A special electrode is used and welding is carried out
manually just as one does in open air welding. The increased freedom of
movement makes wet welding the most effective, efficient and economical method.
Welding power supply is located on the surface with connection to the
diver/welder via cables and hoses.
In wet welding MMA (manual metal arc welding)
is used.
Proses Pengelasan Wet Welding
Sumber : https://www.diversinstitute.edu/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/underwater-welding.jpg
Power Supply used : DC
Polarity : -ve polarity
Konfigurasi Alat Pengelas
Sumber : http://ahu12.blogspot.co.id/2014/02/underwater-welding.html
When DC is used with +ve polarity, electrolysis will take place and cause rapid
deterioration of any metallic components in the electrode holder. For wet
welding AC is not used on account of electrical safety and difficulty in
maintaining an arc underwater.
The power source should be a direct current
machine rated at 300 or 400 amperes. Motor generator welding machines are most
often used for underwater welding in the wet. The welding machine frame must be
grounded to the ship. The welding circuit must include a positive type of
switch, usually a knife switch operated on the surface and commanded by the
welder-diver. The knife switch in the electrode circuit must be capable of
breaking the full welding current and is used for safety reasons. The welding
power should be connected to the electrode holder only during welding.
Direct current with electrode negative (straight polarity) is used. Special
welding electrode holders with extra insulation against the water are used. The
underwater welding electrode holder utilizes a twist type head for gripping the
electrode. It accommodates two sizes of electrodes.
The electrode types used conform to AWS E6013 classification. The electrodes
must be waterproofed. All connections must be thoroughly insulated so that the
water cannot come in contact with the metal parts. If the insulation does leak,
seawater will come in contact with the metal conductor and part of the current
will leak away and will not be available at the arc. In addition, there will be
rapid deterioration of the copper cable at the point of the leak.
Hyperbaric Welding (dry welding)
Hyperbaric
welding is carried out in chamber sealed around the structure o be welded. The
chamber is filled with a gas (commonly helium containing 0.5 bar of oxygen) at
the prevailing pressure. The habitat is sealed onto the pipeline and filled
with a breathable mixture of helium and oxygen, at or slightly above the
ambient pressure at which the welding is to take place. This method produces
high-quality weld joints that meet X-ray and code requirements. The gas
tungsten arc welding process is employed for this process. The area under the
floor of the Habitat is open to water. Thus the welding is done in the dry but
at the hydrostatic pressure of the sea water surrounding the Habitat.
Habitat untuk Diver
Sumber : http://www.oceaneering.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/20100205-inthenews-wet-dry-welding-seminar.jpg
Proses Pengelasan dalam Habitat
Sumber : http://hyperbaricwelding101.weebly.com/uploads/1/4/0/2/14027937/9230817_orig.jpg?0
Risk Involved
There is a risk to the welder/diver of
electric shock. Precautions include achieving adequate electrical insulation of
the welding equipment, shutting off the electricity supply immediately the arc
is extinguished, and limiting the open-circuit voltage of MMA (SMA) welding
sets. Secondly, hydrogen and oxygen are produced by the arc in wet welding.
Precautions must be taken to avoid the build-up of pockets of gas, which are
potentially explosive. The other main area of risk is to the life or health of
the welder/diver from nitrogen introduced into the blood steam during exposure
to air at increased pressure. Precautions include the provision of an emergency
air or gas supply, stand-by divers, and decompression chambers to avoid
nitrogen narcosis following rapid surfacing after saturation diving.
For the structures being welded by wet underwater welding, inspection following
welding may be more difficult than for welds deposited in air. Assuring the
integrity of such underwater welds may be more difficult, and there is a risk
that defects may remain undetected.
Advantages and Disadvantages of Wet Welding
Advantages
Wet underwater MMA welding has now been widely
used for many years in the repair of offshore platforms. The benefits of wet
welding are: -
1) The versatility and low cost of wet welding makes this method highly
desirable.
2) Other benefits include the speed. With which the operation is carried out.
3) It is less costly compared to dry welding.
4) The welder can reach portions of offshore structures that could not be
welded using other methods.
5) No enclosures are needed and no time is lost building. Readily available
standard welding machine and equipments are used. The equipment needed for
mobilization of a wet welded job is minimal.
Disadvantages
Although wet welding is widely used for
underwater fabrication works, it suffers from the following drawbacks: -
1) There is rapid quenching of the weld metal by the surrounding water.
Although quenching increases the tensile strength of the weld, it decreases the
ductility and impact strength of the weldment and increases porosity and
hardness.
2) Hydrogen Embrittlement – Large amount of hydrogen is present in the weld
region, resulting from the dissociation of the water vapour in the arc region.
The H2 dissolves in the Heat Affected Zone (HAZ) and the weld metal, which
causes Embrittlement, cracks and microscopic fissures. Cracks can grow and may
result in catastrophic failure of the structure.
3) Another disadvantage is poor visibility. The welder some times is not able
to weld properly.
Advantages and Disadvantages of Dry Welding
Advantages
1) Welder/Diver Safety – Welding is performed
in a chamber, immune to ocean currents and marine animals. The warm, dry
habitat is well illuminated and has its own environmental control system (ECS).
2) Good Quality Welds – This method has ability to produce welds of quality
comparable to open air welds because water is no longer present to quench the
weld and H2 level is much lower than wet welds.
3) Surface Monitoring – Joint preparation, pipe alignment, NDT inspection, etc.
are monitored visually.
4) Non-Destructive Testing (NDT) – NDT is also facilitated by the dry habitat
environment.
Disadvantages
1) The habitat welding requires large
quantities of complex equipment and much support equipment on the surface. The
chamber is extremely complex.
2) Cost of habitat welding is extremely high and increases with depth. Work
depth has an effect on habitat welding. At greater depths, the arc constricts
and corresponding higher voltages are required. The process is costly – a $
80000 charge for a single weld job. One cannot use the same chamber for another
job, if it is a different one.
Principle of operation of Wet Welding
The
process of underwater wet welding takes in the following manner:
The work to be welded is connected to one side of an electric circuit, and a
metal electrode to the other side. These two parts of the circuit are brought
together, and then separated slightly. The electric current jumps the gap and
causes a sustained spark (arc), which melts the bare metal, forming a weld
pool. At the same time, the tip of electrode melts, and metal droplets are
projected into the weld pool. During this operation, the flux covering the
electrode melts to provide a shielding gas, which is used to stabilize the arc
column and shield the transfer metal. The arc burns in a cavity formed inside
the flux covering, which is designed to burn slower than the metal barrel of
the electrode.
Developments in Under Water Welding
Wet
welding has been used as an underwater welding technique for a long time and is
still being used. With recent acceleration in the construction of offshore
structures underwater welding has assumed increased importance. This has led to
the development of alternative welding methods like friction welding, explosive
welding, and stud welding. Sufficient literature is not available of these
processes.
Scope for further developments
Wet
MMA is still being used for underwater repairs, but the quality of wet welds is
poor and are prone to hydrogen cracking. Dry Hyperbaric welds are better in
quality than wet welds. Present trend is towards automation. THOR – 1 (TIG
Hyperbaric Orbital Robot) is developed where diver performs pipefitting,
installs the trac and orbital head on the pipe and the rest process is
automated.
Developments of diverless Hyperbaric welding system is an even greater
challenge calling for annexe developments like pipe preparation and aligning,
automatic electrode and wire reel changing functions, using a robot arm
installed. This is in testing stage in deep waters. Explosive and friction
welding are also to be tested in deep waters.
Sources :
Joshi, Amit Mukund. –. “Underwater Welding”.
Bombay: Indian Institute of Technology.
http://ahu12.blogspot.co.id/2014/02/underwater-welding.html
Dega Damara Aditramulyadi
Student ID : 15512046
Course : KL4220 Subsea Pipeline
Lecturer : Prof. Ir. Ricky Lukman Tawekal, MSE, Ph. D.
Eko Charnius Ilman, ST, MT
Ocean Engineering Program, Institut Teknologi Bandung
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