API 571 Training Course
API 571 Training Course
Stainless Steels
Chromium SS:
Type 410 (12% Cr), Type 430 (17% Cr) For high-temp sulfidation in non-hydrogen environments (esp. atmospheric Crude Units, vacuum units)
Austenitic SS:
300-series: Types 304/L, 316/L, 317, 321, 347 For H2/H2S environments (cladding, piping, internals in hydrocrackers, hydrotreaters) High-temperature services (FCC units) Heat exchanger shells, tubesheets, and tubes Furnace tubes
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pitting resistance than 300-series SS (resists SCC to 200-250F, instead of 140F) Alloy 20 (29Cr-20Ni) for SCC resistance, also for sulfuric acid resistance in turbulent locations, especially pumps Monel 400 (for HCl acid resistance in Crude Unit distillation towers and overhead systems: trays, overhead piping, cladding) Hastelloy B, C, C-22, C-276 for acid corrosion
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API RP 571
Section 1 Intro & Scope (2 pgs.) Sec. 2 References (API, ASME,
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ASTM, NACE, etc.) (2 pgs.) Sec. 3 Terms & Abbreviations (4 pgs.) Sec. 4 Damage Mechanisms -- All Industries (44 mechs., 152 pgs) Sec. 5 Damage Mechanisms -Refining industry (18 mechs., 61 pgs) PFDs (14 pgs.)
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Section 4.2
Mechanical and Metallurgical
Failure Mechanisms All Industries
(Thermal effects, aging, embrittlement, creep & stress rupture, fatigue, erosion)
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4.2.2: Spheroidization
Changes in CS and low-alloy
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microstructure after long-term exposure at 850-1400F Carbide coarsening results in a decrease in high-temperature tensile and creep strength CS above ~ 800-850F 9Cr-1Mo above ~ 1000F
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4.2.2: Spheroidization
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4.2.2: Spheroidization
Occurs in:
Furnace tubes, hot-wall piping and equipment, FCC, coker, and cat reformer units, where temperature exceeds 850F
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4.2.2: Spheroidization
Inspection techniques:
-- Field Metallurgical Replication (FMR, replicas) -- Field hardness testing (Brinell) -- remove samples for lab analysis
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internals in the susceptible temperature range (cladding, trays, etc. in FCC, coker, and Crude towers) May result in difficulty welding or straightening affected components
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Inspection techniques:
-- Field hardness testing (Brinell) -- Bend test -- Charpy impact testing
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after long-term exposure to 10001700F Hard, brittle intermetallic phases are formed from the ferrite phase 321SS & 347SS are more susceptible than 304SS
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Inspection techniques:
-- FMR -- remove samples for lab analysis -- Charpy impact test
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Affects furnace tubes, boiler tubes, hangers Internal creep voids grow and link together to form internal fissures and cracks Damage can be detected at 1/3 to 1/2 of creep life Bulging, go/no-go when expansion reaches 3-8%, depending on alloy
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fatigue Cyclic stress due to alternating temperatures results in crack formation and propagation Typically forms wedge-shaped or carrot-shaped, scale-filled cracks
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Inspection techniques: -- Visual inspection + -- Dye penetrant (PT) of stainless steel -- Wet fluorescent magnetic particle testing (WFMT) of carbon steels and Cr-Mo alloys -- External SWUT at attachment welds
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Inspection techniques:
-- Visual inspection at stress risers -- Check for oscillation, vibration -- Dye penetrant (PT) -- Wet fluorescent magnetic particle testing (WFMT) -- Shear wave UT
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Section 4.3
Uniform or Localized Loss of
Thickness All Industries Aqueous Corrosion
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SS
CS
Electrolyte
CS
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Mg
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Chlorides in insulation worsen CUI Worse downwind of cooling towers Use chloride-free insulation Coat/paint susceptible vessels Make sure weather jacketing is in good condition
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Corrosion techniques: -- visual inspection under insulation -- guided wave UT to find general metal loss -- radiography (RT) of small bore piping -- strip insulation and UT thickness
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velocity, temperature monitoring Velocity too low (CS < 3 fps): solids deposit on tube walls and lead to underdeposit pitting Velocity too high (brass > 3 fps): erosion-corrosion Upgrade to Cu-Ni, duplex SS, titanium, epoxy coated tubes
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60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0 CS 50 100 150 Temperature F Adm. Brass 70-30 Cu-Ni 200 T itanium 250
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Inspection techniques:
-- Visual inspection at tube ends -- Eddy current (EC) inspection -- IRIS inspection of magnetic tubes -- Split sample tube & send to lab -- Monitor water chemistry
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Section 4.4
High-Temperature Corrosion Above 400F All Industries
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Inspection Techniques:
-- Use TIs & IR thermography while
in service to determine the locations of hot spots -- Visual inspection (look for thick scale) -- UT thickness gauging
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Inspection Techniques:
-- TIs & IR thermography while in
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Section 4.5
Environment Assisted
Cracking (SCC) All Industries
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Stress relief; PWHT Reduce temperature Use coatings Reduce stress Design changes: avoid wet/dry conditions
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Aqueous mechanism Requires water with >50 ppm ClAbove ~130F in 300-series SS Above 250-300F in Duplex SS (Alloy 2205) Branched cracking at welds, bends Areas with high residual stress: welds, cold formed bends, bellows, expanded tubes
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Sensitization of 300-Series SS
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Inspection Techniques: -- On-line acoustic emission (AE) -- Eddy current (EC) -- Dye penetrant (PT) -- Visual inspection at tube ends -- Shear wave UT to size cracks -- split tubes and inspect ID
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Steels and nickel alloys are susceptible Must have liquid water w/ caustic >50 ppm Temperature >120F pH 8-14 Tensile stress >25% of YS Non-PWHTd welds, bends are especially susceptible
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Section 5.1.1.1:
Uniform or Localized Loss of Thickness Refining Industry
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Amines are used to remove corrosive acid gases (H2S & CO2) from process gases and liquids
Amines can contain acid gases and corrosive degradation products Contaminants include abrasive solids, salts, process chemicals
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Localized metal loss, especially in high turbulence areas Caused by flashing of acid gases (H2S and CO2) High acid gas loading and salt levels can lead to hydrogen blistering & HIC Can cause SCC in non-post weld heat treated equipment Rich amine is more corrosive
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Design for 6 fps max. velocity on rich side, 20 fps max. on lean side Decrease turbulence Clad vessels with 300-series stainless steels Upgrade piping, valves, tees to 304L, 316L stainless steel
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Amine regenerators, reboilers, and associated piping where temperature exceeds 200F Rich amine piping High velocity, turbulent streams with acid gas flashing (pump discharge spools, downstream of letdown valves)
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Aqueous corrosion mechanism where H2S and NH3 exist simultaneously (NH3+H2S = NH4HS) Hydrotreater and FCC overhead systems (especially effluent air coolers and inlet/ outlet piping Amine regenerator overhead systems Sour water stripper overhead systems
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Reduce velocity and turbulence Clad severe areas w/ 300-series SS Use Incoloy 825 for effluent air cooler
headers & piping
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Tops of atmospheric and vacuum towers Atmospheric & vacuum crude distillation unit overhead streams Acid is the result of hydrolysis of magnesium and calcium chloride salts in crude oils Desalting can reduce HCl formation Corrosion occurs where water condenses Upgrades: Monel trays and cladding
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General wasting & washed out appearance Severe thinning with no scale Corrosion rate can exceed an inch per year (1000 mpy) on carbon steel at elevated temperatures Monel has been successful as trays at top of distillation tower and in O/H vapor line
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Occurs in the presence of hot H2 and H2S simultaneously Corrosion rate depends on temperature and partial pressure of H2S Usually uniform metal loss H2 results in porous non-protective iron sulfide scale
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> 500-550F 12 Cr steel (410SS): > 700-800F 300-series SS: > 900-1000F Hydrotreaters, FCCs 300-series SS for reactor cladding, internals, and hot piping (> 750F)
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Inspection Techniques:
-- Visual inspection +
-- Ultrasonic thickness (UT) -- Radiography (RT)
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thinning of carbon steel CS cannot be used for weak acid Refineries use carbon steel extensively for strong acid concentrations (95100%) at near ambient temperatures Can require large corrosion allowances
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Velocity must be <3 fps for CS CS corrosion rate < 50 mpy if acid
concentration > 65%, T <125F, velocity < 3 fps 316SS for thin-wall piping
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Corrosion of Alloy 20
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Section 5.1.2
Environment-Assisted Cracking Refining Industry
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-- overhead equipment
-- separators & K.O. drums -- heat exchanger channels & shells
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Hydrogen atoms are absorbed into the steel and form internal hydrogen blisters and cracks
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200 for CS, BHN 215 for low-alloy steels Valve trim, bolting <Rc 22, YS <90 ksi welds, 12Cr trim, B7 bolting susceptible Refer to NACE MR-0175 Use B7M bolts
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PWHT welds to reduce weld hardness and residual stress BHN 200 max. for carbon steel; BHN 215 max. for low-alloy steels PWHT carbon steel at 1100-1200F (1 hr./inch, 1 hr. min.) PWHT 1-1/4Cr & 2-1/4Cr steel at 1300-1375F 130
Inspection: -- Visual inspection for blisters, cracks -- Straight beam and shear wave UT can find internal blisters -- Inspect welds, HAZs for SSC with WFMT (no PT -- cracks can be tight) -- Alternating current magnetic flux leakage (ACFM) -- Radiography (RT)
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In hot high-pressure hydrogen CS immune to ~450F, depends on H2 pp Cr & Mo increase HTHA resistance
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(1-1/4Cr-1/2Mo, 2-1/4Cr-1Mo, 3Cr-1Mo) Causes internal methane bubbles and fissures Reduces impact toughness; causes blisters Can be very difficult to find; advanced inspection techniques HTHA predicted by API 941 (Nelson Curves)
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Hydrogen in contact with steel at high temperature leads to decarburization and subsequent methane formation:
C(Fe) + 4H CH4 (gas)
Methane that forms internally in steels, result in fissures from high-pressure bubbles on grain boundaries Fissures result loss of fracture toughness, and potentially catastrophic brittle fractures
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Very difficult to find incipient attack May be more likely at spec breaks, in dead legs, in welds, HAZs Must have an idea of where to look UT velocity ratio and backscatter Focused beam shear wave If in doubt, take a boat sample or replace suspected piping; downgrade PVs
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