Optical gas imaging cameras provide several benefits over standard leak detection systems for hydrogen-cooling system maintenance employees.
Fremont, CA: Maintaining hydrogen-cooled generators is crucial for a power plant's safe and efficient operation. Finding and correcting hydrogen leaks from the cooling system necessitates extensive searches of components, valves, fittings, and other areas. Unfortunately, standard methods for detecting hydrogen leaks cannot consistently pinpoint the source of leakage. Optical gas imaging (OGI) cameras that filter for CO2 can considerably enhance leak detection efficiency and performance, allowing utilities to easily discover hydrogen leaks while utilizing CO2 as a tracer gas.
Optical gas imaging cameras provide several benefits over standard leak detection systems for hydrogen-cooling system maintenance employees. Surveyors can scan large areas from varied distances using these lightweight and portable instruments, eliminating the requirement for direct contact with the equipment. They also allow inspection of regions that contact measuring techniques cannot reach, including the hundreds of connections and fittings in a hydrogen cooling system. Because traditional technologies like Snoop and sniffers are hit-or-miss, a severe leak may be too difficult to identify while the equipment is operational. Finding it might necessitate an unscheduled closure, which would have a significant impact on the utility's bottom line.
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With OGI and the FLIR GF343, equipment may get examined while it is online and running normally, eliminating unforeseen disruptions. The cameras even allow for leak detection and speedy repairs in specific elements of the system, including the hydrogen drier skid, while the generator remains operational. Many cameras also capture GPS data for the picture or video tagging. This location data can be saved and used to create work requests for repairs for the next scheduled generator outage. The recorded leak photos also help maintenance employees to determine whether a particular leak has gotten worse over time. Above all, the camera system provides staff with the information they ought to control leakage levels at or below the permitted level, allowing generator operations to continue safely.
Unplanned outages are an unwanted and costly strain on power production facilities. Instead of typical inspection methods, sensitive optical gas imaging cameras using CO2 as a tracer gas may observe hydrogen leaks in real-time, monitor them over time, and plan optimal and cost-effective maintenance. Optical gas imaging cameras may detect leaks and thermal abnormalities early, lowering maintenance and downtime costs and saving people from serious damage. They provide all these advantages while causing fewer hassles than conventional gas leak detecting technologies.