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Nickel Institute
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Corrosion by Process Waters
R. W. Ross Consultant Nickel Institute
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Summary Scaling and Corrosion Effects of Velocity Biological Effects
Chlorides Rouging of SS
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Water Chemistry Effects
Corrosion Dissolved Oxygen Chlorides pH Hardness Temperature Scale Dissolved Solids Calcium Ions pH Temperature
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Water Chemistry Effects
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Corrosion Of Carbon Steel In Water
0.76 72 ºF (22 ºC) 104 ºF (40 ºC) 0.51 Corrosion Rate, mpy Corrosion Rate, mm/y 0.25 pH of Water
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Corrosion Of Carbon Steel In Low-velocity Water
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Corrosion Of Carbon Steel Effect Of Velocity In Seawater
1.27 Corrosion Rate, mpy Corrosion Rate, mm/y 0.64 (1.5) (3.0) (4.7) (6.1) (7.6) ft/sec (m/s)
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Erosion-corrosion - Inlet
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Erosion-corrosion Flow
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Erosion-corrosion Tube Blockage
Flow
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High-velocity Seawater >120 fps (36.6 m/s)
Corrosion Rate, Alloy mpy mm/y 625/C <1 < 0.03 400/K <1 < 0.03 718/725/ <1 < 0.03 T-304/T <1 < 0.03 C Steel >300 > 7.62
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Biological Effects Macrofouling
Mussels Clams Barnacles Plant Life
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Biological Effects Macrofouling
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Bacteria Effects - MIC (Microbiologically Induced Corrosion)
Species Oxygen Metals Corrosive Desulfovibrio No Fe, Al, Cu Sulfide Thiobacillus Yes Fe, Cu Sulfuric Acid Gallionella Yes Fe Fe++ to Fe+++ Mn++ to Mn+++
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Bacteria Effects - MIC Type 304 SS water tank 8 months of service Guam
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Bacteria Effects - MIC (Type 304 SS, Before Cleaning)
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Bacteria Effects - MIC (After Cleaning)
0.15 in. (3.8) mm) Max. Attack
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Bacteria Effects - MIC (After Cleaning - No Attack)
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Prevention Of MIC Keep The System Clean
Keep Water Flow > 6 fps (2 m/s) Use Bactericide: Chlorine Chlorine Dioxide Hypochlorite Ozone Non-oxidizing
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Prevention Of MIC Use Continuous Cleaning
Use High Pressure Hydrolancing Use Stainless Steel Scrapers (Hard to Remove or Heavy Deposits) Use Alloy Resistant to MIC
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Prevention Of MIC - 6% Mo ALLOY
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Effects of Chlorides
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Crevice Corrosion Type 303
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Stainless Steels Localized Corrosion Resistance
Alloy PRE 2507/Alloy 6% Mo Alloys
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Nickel Alloys Localized Corrosion Resistance
Alloy PRE 6% Mo – 45 22/ C
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Stainless Steels for Use in Waters
Potable water Type 304 < 200 ppm chlorides Type 316 < 1000 ppm chlorides River water Risk of MIC if water is not treated Use type 316 or higher Mo grades: L Mo Well water Use type 316 or higher Mo grades
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Do not confuse Chloride Cl- and Chlorine Cl2
Maximum Concentration (ppm) in Water to Avoid Crevice Corrosion Chloride Cl- Chlorine Cl2 304 200 2 316 1000 4 Shock dosing, such as 25 ppm chlorine for 24 hours, is common practice and has not been found to cause problems.
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Stress Corrosion Cracking (SCC)
Steam Line
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Chloride SCC Duplex vs T-316 Stainless Steel
No cracking below lines Type 316 (315) 22 Cr Duplex 18 Cr Duplex (204) (93)
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Effect of Nickel Content on Stress Corrosion Cracking Boiling 45% MgCl2
No SCC Ni Alloys SCC 6% Mo SS Duplex SS
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HIGH CHLORIDE WATERS
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How does external environment affect process equipment?
HIGH CHLORIDE WATERS How does external environment affect process equipment?
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Marine Corrosion of C Steel Relative Corrosion Rates
Marine Corrosion of C Steel Relative Corrosion Rates* – Vary with Sea Conditions Atmospheric Splash Tidal Submerged Subsoil *Protected Harbor 25 mpy (0.64 mm/y) 5 mpy (0.13 mm/y)
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Uniform Corrosion
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Effect of Chromium Weight Loss, mg. / sq. dm. 250M Lot 44 Months
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Alloy C in Marine Atmosphere 56 Years of Exposure
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Type 304 Fastener In Marine Tide After 6 Months
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Type 304 Fastener Above Marine Tide After 6 Months
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Crevice Corrosion
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Crevice Corrosion of Alloy 825 Heat Exchanger Tubing – Shell Side 85° F, Aerated Seawater
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Crevice Corrosion of Alloy 625 Waterbox With Deaerated, Treated Seawater
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Crevice Corrosion of Alloy 825 Heat Exchanger Tubesheet – Water Side 225° F, Deaerated, Treated Seawater Tube to Tubesheet Joint
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Types Of Severe Crevices
Stationary O Rings Non-Metallic Connector Flange Face Under Gasket Tube to Tubesheet Joint
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Corrosion of 90-10 Cu-Ni in Seawater
Corrosion Rate, mpy
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Marine Fouling 18 Months in Quiet Seawater
C Steel Aluminum
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Fouling of Titanium Waterbox 3 mo. Exposure
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Fouling of Titanium Waterbox 6 mo. Exposure
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Effect of Chlorination <1 fps Seawater Flow
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90-10 Cu-Ni Alloy Fouling - Quiet Seawater
3 Mo 9 Mo 18 Mo 3 Yr 4 Yr 5 Yr
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90-10 Cu-Ni Intake Piping Desalination Plants
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Seawater Piping Systems
90-10 Cu-Ni Alloy Seawater Piping Systems
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Seawater Heat Exchangers
90-10 Cu-Ni Alloy Seawater Heat Exchangers
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Pumps - Impellers
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Rouging of Stainless Steels High Purity Water Water For Injection (WFI)
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Why Use Stainless Steels (316L) for Pharma & Biotech?
Good corrosion resistance and excellent batch to batch cleanability Good structural properties for process equipment Easily formed, fabricated and welded
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What about Rouging. What is Rouging
What about Rouging? What is Rouging? Rouging is a general term used to describe several species of predominately iron oxide deposits on the wall of piping and vessels in high purity water systems.
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Rouging is not New! Rouging is not unique to the pharmaceutical and biotech industries. Was recognized over 40 years ago with rouging of SS vessels at Savannah River.
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Where is Rouge often Found
Water systems, usually high purity water and clean-steam systems Distillation and clean-steam generating equipment Rouge found on wall of vessels, piping and polymer gaskets (Teflon®) downstream of where originated
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Is Rouge Harmful? No reports or evidence that rouging is precursor to a SS corrosion failure. We are not in a position to comment on whether rouge is harmful to the product being produced. Common practice is to remove rouge.
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Rouging Generally a loose powdery deposit, but can be tightly adherent
Hydrated or partially hydrated ferric oxide (Fe2O3) or ferroso-ferric oxide (Fe3O4) Usually occurs in high purity ( µS/cm), high temperature water (60 – 100 C)
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Rouging Reddish brown rust color, but can range from orange to blue-black. Origin is uncertain but generally thought to be ions or colloids that are formed at one location and transported in the solution to another where they are precipitated. Removed by acid cleaning in nitric, phosphoric, citric, or oxalic acid.
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Rouging - Types Type 1 – Corrosion of Steel, Deposits Downstream Pumps prime suspects – cavitation or erosion when velocity over ~ 100fps and higher temperatures Delta ferrite in cast impellers may contribute by eroding easier and higher iron content Type 2 – Corrosion Product of Stainless Steel Type 3 – Corrosion Product of Stainless Steel in Steam Systems > 100 C
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Rouging of Stainless Steels
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Rouging over 4 years inside electropolished Type 316L - column still used to produce ultra-pure water for pharmaceutical use
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Rouging of Stainless Steels
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De-rouging & Passivation 3 Steps
Cleaning – detergent wash followed by thorough water rinse De-rouging chemical treatment Passivation followed by thorough water rinse
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Electrochemical Coloring
Proprietary electrochemical processes – invented in 1972 by Inco, further developed in Japan Interference between the light beams refracted from the substrate and the surface of the oxide film creates color Appearance and color vary with immersion time and surface finish Incident light Color Oxide
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Experience Music Project
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Summary Discussed Scaling and Corrosion Described Effects of Velocity
Reviewed Biological Effects Discussed Chlorides Summarized Rouging of SS
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Questions ?
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