dc.description.abstract |
The issue of corrosion has been an inevitable canker that keeps affecting all facets of human
lives; from industry, utilities, transport, production, to manufacturing fields. Issues of
corrosion in sectors like oil, water, gas, etc. have been tackled, leaving behind electricity.
The generation, transmission and distribution systems have well-installed backfilled
earthing systems for protection against all abnormalities such as fire, shocks and
electrocution which are very fatal, but much attention has not been given to the protection
at the consumers’ end. There are faulty, improperly installed, corroded or absence of
earthing systems at the consumers’ end. Some backfill materials have been applied to some
rods to reduce earth resistance and minimise corrosion of these earthing systems. It also
seeks to tackle the usage of numerical approach for reducing corrosion of buried earth
electrodes using two artificial intelligence techniques. Five copper-coated cast-iron rods
were utilised for this investigation; one (reference) was buried without backfill material
whereas the other four were buried with tyre ash, palm kernel cake, charred coconut husk
and coconut coir as backfill materials for twenty-two months. A visual inspection along with
measurement of thickness, analyses by X-Ray Fluorescence Spectroscopy (XRF), and
Scanning Electron Microscopy coupled with backscattered Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy
(SEM-EDS) were conducted to determine the extent of corrosion. Six parameters, namely,
resistance, rainfall, temperature, backfill materials, time (weeks), and corrosion rates were
used to compare the results from the use of Mamdani Fuzzy Logic and Artificial Neural
Network (ANN) techniques. The results obtained showed a colour change of all the rods
from reddish-brown to grey, suggesting that corrosion might have taken place. This was
confirmed by the increase in thickness for all the buried rods as against the unburied rod.
The XRF analysis recorded an increase in the percentage values of the iron content for all
buried rods with charred coconut husk recording the highest value of 99.42% and 88.58%
as least for the unburied rod. SEM-EDS results showed a percentage of oxygen in all the
buried rods’ analyses. The rod buried in tyre ash backfill recorded 29.73% for the highest
oxygen value with no oxygen value for the reference. These were proof of corrosion activity
for the two analyses. Lastly, the ANN had a lower Mean Square Error (MSE) of 0.0865
compared to that of the Mamdani Fuzzy Logic Model 0.3583, showing that ANN performed
better than the Mamdani Fuzzy Logic Model when both techniques were used to predict the
corrosion rates of the rods. Out of the four backfill materials used, charred coconut husk
gave the best results in terms of reduced resistance values and lower rate of corrosion value. |
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