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Analyzing Mechanical Systems Using Infrared Thermography
Analyzing Mechanical Systems Using Infrared Thermography
Thermography
from www.petersonpredict.com
Posted 3/17/2008
INTRODUCTION
Infrared Thermal Imaging is an excellent condition monitoring tool to assist in the reduction of maintenance costs on mechanical
equipment. The technique allows for the monitoring of temperatures and thermal patterns while the equipment is online and
running under full load. Most mechanical equipment has allowable operating temperature limits that can be used as guidelines.
Unlike many other test methods, Infrared Thermal Imaging can be used on a wide variety of equipment including pumps, motors,
bearings, pulleys, fans, drives, conveyors etc. This section will explain the benefits of Infrared Thermal Imaging as a condition
monitoring tool for plant mechanical systems.
We will highlight a few uses of Infrared Thermal Imaging when applied to analysis of mechanical equipment.
Infrared Thermal Imaging is an electronic technique that quite literally allows us to see thermal energy. With this new capability
plant maintenance personnel have recognized Infrared Thermal Imaging as one of the most versatile and effective condition
monitoring tools available today. Infrared Thermal Imaging enhances a company’s ability to predict equipment failure and plan
corrective action before a costly shutdown, equipment damage, or personal injury occurs.
Since most equipment or processes are designed to eliminate thermal energy under normal operation, simply identifying a
thermal pattern does not mean a problem has been located. The thermographer must be familiar with the mechanical
components being evaluated. Once a normal thermal signature is obtained and understood, any deviation from this normal
signature will then provide evidence of a suspect problem developing.
In mechanical applications, Infrared Thermal Imaging is more useful for locating a problem area than for indicating the root cause
of the overheating. The heat is usually produced within a component that is not visible directly to the camera. That heat must
conduct up through the material and present itself as a pattern on the surface of the object in order for the infrared camera to
sense it. Other equipment such as vibration analysis, oil analysis, and ultrasound can be employed to further determine where
the problem actually lies.
Let’s take a look at some of the applications and the benefits derived from finding these with Infrared Thermal Imaging.
THERMOGRAPHY APPLICATIONS
Drives/Conveyors, Pillow Blocks, Overheated bearings or rollers, misalignment of shaft, pulley or coupling, lubrication
Couplings, Gears, Power failure uneven pressure.
Transmission Belts, Pulleys, Shafts
Pumps/Compressors/Fans/Blowers Overheated bearings, high compressor discharges temperature, high oil temperature,
and broken or defective valve.
Internal Combustion Engines Valve or injector malfunction, blocked radiator tubes and oil coolers. Thermal
distribution, high radiator inlet or outlet temperature.
Heavy Duty Equipment – Tires, Overheating brakes, tires, bearings, pulleys, gears, gear or pulley misalignment, and
Bearings, Brakes, Hydraulics, blockages in hydraulics.
Kilns, Ball Mills, Paper Machines
Mechanical Drive Turbines and High lube oil temperature, high bearing temperatures, faulty stop/control valve
Small Turbine Generator Units, Gas operation, uneven metal temperature, leaking shaft seals, gas turbine firing conditions,
Turbine, Exhaust Ducts including deterioration in firing chambers, cross firing tubes.
Ovens, Furnaces, Kilns, Pipes Location and severity of damaged insulation, location of steam leaks in buried steam
lines.
IMPROVED TROUBLESHOOTING
Infrared Thermal Imaging definitely should be one of the tools that are selected for motor and rotating equipment inspection.
Thermographic examination can help technicians use the other tools, such as vibration analysis, more effectively. If a thermal
anomaly is found, then the other tools can be employed to help isolate the cause of the problem.
When considering electric motors and generators, operating temperatures and thermal patterns can be a valuable key in a
predictive maintenance program. All motors have a normal thermal pattern as well as given maximum operating temperature.
This temperature is usually stated on the nameplate of the motor and is normally given as a rise in degrees C above the ambient
air temperature. Most motors are designed to operate in ambient temperatures that do not exceed 40 C. Conditions such as
inadequate air flow, partial discharge, unbalanced voltage, bearing failure, insulation failure and degradation in the rotor or stator
can be identified with an Infrared Thermal Imaging monitoring program. Abnormal thermal patterns can also identify
misalignment in couplings when these devices are used in conjunction with motors.
When comparing these two motors,
the thermal patterns are similar but
there is a marked overal temperature
rise on the motor on the left.
The temperature distribution across a pulley sheave should be uniform if everything is working as intended. In one documented
case of a pulley arrangement with several belts, several belts were found to be running hotter than others.
The belts were replaced with no improvement in the thermal distribution. Something was obviously wrong. The pulley did not
appear to be worn, yet it was replaced to see if the uneven heating would disappear. To everyone’s surprise the uneven thermal
distribution remained. At this point some people were questioning the Infrared Thermal Imaging data!
Pulley-bearing combinations like this can be investigated with Infrared Thermal Imaging.
Vibration testing confirmed there was something amiss. Test data showed that the fan speed was decreasing in relation to the
motor speed over a period of time. This means that the belts were slipping. At this point, all the materials that had been removed
were carefully inspected. It was then hypothesized that the belts may not have come from a matched set. After checking with the
stockroom clerk, it was determined that these belts had not been stored and retained as a matched set. A matched set of belts
was procured and fitted to the pulley system, and the Infrared Thermal Imaging showed a nice even thermal distribution. This is
an example where Infrared Thermal Imaging used with other instrumentation and
the perseverance of the investigators drove the inspection process to a correct
and satisfactory resolution of the problem.
STEAM TRAPS
Steam is an efficient way to transport heat energy. The latent heat needed to transform water into the gaseous state, steam, is
extremely large. This means that large amounts of heat energy can be transported with a minimum temperature differential to the
environment. This equates into lower energy and insulation costs.
When steam arrives at the site where heat energy is needed, it condenses, thereby releasing the large latent heat it was
carrying. The condensate formed by this process must be removed by the steam system and returned to the boiler where it is
turned back into the steam and the cycle is repeated.
The steam trap performs this function; to hold back live steam while allowing gases and condensate to pass through. This allows
more energy to be obtained from the steam, thus raising a steam system’s overall efficiency.
An oil refinery identified 14% of their traps were malfunctioning. By replacing or repairing these traps they saved approximately
$600,000 per year.
A refractory material is basically a high temperature insulator. They are usually a non-metallic ceramic type of material and are
commonly supplied in brick form. Refractory materials are used inside furnaces, ovens, boilers, hot storage tanks and other
equipment that produces or contains extremely hot temperatures.
Using Infrared Thermal Imaging to inspect refractory begins with the assumption that a uniform temperature inside a vessel will
result in uniform warming of its exterior as heat is conducted to the vessel’s walls.
An ideal vessel would have a perfectly uniform temperature on its external surface. If a crack, or other defective conditions
existed in the insulating medium, the exterior surface would increase in temperature in direct proportion to and in the exact
location of the defect. Thus, the defect would be obvious based on the non-uniform conductance of heat into the exterior surface.
If the exterior metal is threatened or a safety hazard may exist, absolute temperature measurements of the hot areas become
important.
In normal practice, there are other structural variations which cause non-uniform heat patterns in addition to the defects; these
include grid work, refractory type variations, port holes, catwalks, etc.
ROTARY KILNS
In the manufacture of cement the raw materials are ground together, the mixture is heated until it fuses into a clinker, and the
clinker is ground into a fine powder. The heating is usually accomplished in rotary kilns which look like huge rotating pipes,
sometimes hundreds of feet long. The kilns are slightly tilted from the horizontal, and the raw material is introduced at the upper
end, either in the form of a dry rock powder or as a wet paste composed of ground-up rock and water. As the charge progresses
down through the kiln, it is dried and heated by the hot gases from a flame at the lower end. After it leaves the kiln, the clinker is
cooled quickly and ground, and then conveyed by a blower to packing machinery or storage silos.