High-Temperature – Subsea Pipeline
Solutions

High-Temperature – Subsea Pipeline

Inspect a subsea pipeline at risk of circumferential cracking after mechanical displacement, despite tight launcher constraints and high internal temperatures (up to 90°C), with no off-the-shelf tool available.

Overview

Key challenge: 
Inspect a subsea pipeline at risk of circumferential cracking after mechanical displacement, despite tight launcher constraints and high internal temperatures (up to 90°C), with no off-the-shelf tool available. 

Project Details 

Length: 300 m 
Diameter: 12-in. 
Type: Subsea water injection pipeline 
Inspection Medium: Treated seawater 
Location: Offshore 
Continent: South America 
Tool: UT-CD Hawk, specializing in high-resolution circumferential crack detection & sizing. 

Pipeline Challenges & Solutions 

Challenge 1:  
Reducing tool length from the standard size of 4.6 m to 1.3 m to fit short launcher 

Solution:  
Expanded space in the body’s shell 
Redesigned & condensed electronic parts 

Challenge 2:  
High operating temperature of 90°C, well-beyond conventional ILI tool specs 

Solution: 
Added heat sinks & liquid coolants 
Redesigned electronic parts using heat-resistant alternatives 
Conducted thorough heat tests prior to mobilization 

Challenge 3:  
Unique pipeline fabrication and possible crack defects 

Solution:  
Fabricated spools in-house following methods provided by the operator 
Added EDM notches in a range of sizes to recreate expected defects 
Inserted custom spool in pipeline at test yard to test the tool as close to real conditions as possible 

Conclusion 

The successful run delivered full coverage and accurate flaw detection, allowing the operator to return the pipeline to full pressure, set a baseline for long-term crack monitoring, and calculate a precise remaining life assessment.