19 April 2024 
 
25 September 2018

Safer screw connections

Safety-critical threaded connections in the energy generation sector, for example for wind turbines, pose the highest requirements for reliable and precise status monitoring. Scientists from Fraunhofer IZFP and Institut für Werkstoffkunde (IW) are developing a standardized, cross-industry method aimed significantly improving the inspection of screws installed in the field.

Photo: Erich Westendarp / pixelio.dePhoto: Erich Westendarp / pixelio.de
Offshore wind turbines pose the highest requirements for reliable and precise status monitoring.
Wind farms at sea are exposed to extreme environmental conditions from storms, waves, the salty atmosphere and saltwater. As a consequence, threaded connections may loosen over time, or even break. This does not only affect heavy components such as rotor blades, but also more lightweight structures, e.g. ladders used by maintenance personnel. Damaged screws can mean acute danger to life. There is no standardized, universally applicable, nondestructive method that allows inspecting screws installed in the field for their operational reliability. For safety reasons, so far, screws have either been replaced early, or re-tightened.

In addition, the maintenance or replacement of screws in the maritime environment is associated with high expenditures of money and time. Expensive special vessels with the appropriate maintenance personnel must be deployed for several days. And if work below the water‘s surface is necessary, each dive is a risk for the industrial divers.

Engineers and scientists from the Fraunhofer IZFP and the IfW are developing a robust and versatile ultrasound method that can be used to inspect the preload force of screws installed, without requiring prior calibration. The correct preload force holds parts and components fastened with threaded connections together and is thus of essential significance in safety-critical areas. The presented method can be used to test said preload force directly and without knowing the original status of the threaded connection.

„Based on the speed of two types of ultrasound waves, we plan to determine the exact tension status of the screw using an adapted method. The slower the two types of ultrasound waves move through the screws, the higher the preload force, i.e., changes in preload force can still be measured even years after the screw was installed,“ explained Michael Becker, project lead engineer at the Fraunhofer IZFP. After its successful development and testing, the ultrasound method is to be standardized and qualified for universal application. This, in combination with systems developed by the Fraunhofer IZFP earlier for ultrasound-based preload-force detection for industrial use, would allow seamless monitoring of the entire lifecycle of threaded connections.

https://www.izfp.fraunhofer.de/

 

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