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    Probe into Water Chemistry Effects on Internal Corrosion Risk for Sour Gas Pipelines

    Source: Journal of Pipeline Systems Engineering and Practice:;2024:;Volume ( 015 ):;issue: 002::page 04024002-1
    Author:
    Ibrahim Albrahim
    ,
    Faisal Al-Abbas
    ,
    Ricardo Sanches Costa
    ,
    Hendrik Debruyn
    ,
    Omar Al-Saif
    DOI: 10.1061/JPSEA2.PSENG-1447
    Publisher: ASCE
    Abstract: Wet sour gas pipelines are subjected to corrosion deterioration mechanisms resulting from interactions between the fluid and piping material. Acid gases, condensation rates, water chemistry, and temperature are the key factors in determining the corrosivity of sour gas streams. This work investigated the corrosion risk of a new wet gas pipeline through laboratory experiments and corrosion modeling. The tests were carried out in Hastelloy autoclave rotating cage system used to generate controlled dynamic conditions inside the reactor to mimic the environment inside the pipeline. The results showed high bottom of the line corrosion (BLC) rate reaching 38.9 mpy (0.99  mm/year), while the measured pitting rate was 17 mpy (0.43  mm/year). The corrosion modeling results showed a severe BLC rate exceeding 200 mpy (5.08  mm/year). The observed high BLC was attributed to the absence of bicarbonate which led to a low pH of 3.9. At this pH, the formation of stable iron sulfide is unlikely. Top of the line corrosion (TLC) rate was observed to be moderate reaching up to 7.8 mpy (0.20  mm/year). This is mainly because of the low condensation rate and formation of a protective iron sulfide layer, which confirmed that iron sulfide scale characteristics are the main factor influencing the TLC rate in sour environments. The expected threshold concentration required of bicarbonate to show some reducing effect on the corrosion rate and pH based on historical data analysis and predictive modeling of real-field conditions is discussed in this work. The results and conclusion detail the path forward for the findings.
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      Probe into Water Chemistry Effects on Internal Corrosion Risk for Sour Gas Pipelines

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    contributor authorIbrahim Albrahim
    contributor authorFaisal Al-Abbas
    contributor authorRicardo Sanches Costa
    contributor authorHendrik Debruyn
    contributor authorOmar Al-Saif
    date accessioned2024-04-27T22:27:11Z
    date available2024-04-27T22:27:11Z
    date issued2024/05/01
    identifier other10.1061-JPSEA2.PSENG-1447.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4296689
    description abstractWet sour gas pipelines are subjected to corrosion deterioration mechanisms resulting from interactions between the fluid and piping material. Acid gases, condensation rates, water chemistry, and temperature are the key factors in determining the corrosivity of sour gas streams. This work investigated the corrosion risk of a new wet gas pipeline through laboratory experiments and corrosion modeling. The tests were carried out in Hastelloy autoclave rotating cage system used to generate controlled dynamic conditions inside the reactor to mimic the environment inside the pipeline. The results showed high bottom of the line corrosion (BLC) rate reaching 38.9 mpy (0.99  mm/year), while the measured pitting rate was 17 mpy (0.43  mm/year). The corrosion modeling results showed a severe BLC rate exceeding 200 mpy (5.08  mm/year). The observed high BLC was attributed to the absence of bicarbonate which led to a low pH of 3.9. At this pH, the formation of stable iron sulfide is unlikely. Top of the line corrosion (TLC) rate was observed to be moderate reaching up to 7.8 mpy (0.20  mm/year). This is mainly because of the low condensation rate and formation of a protective iron sulfide layer, which confirmed that iron sulfide scale characteristics are the main factor influencing the TLC rate in sour environments. The expected threshold concentration required of bicarbonate to show some reducing effect on the corrosion rate and pH based on historical data analysis and predictive modeling of real-field conditions is discussed in this work. The results and conclusion detail the path forward for the findings.
    publisherASCE
    titleProbe into Water Chemistry Effects on Internal Corrosion Risk for Sour Gas Pipelines
    typeJournal Article
    journal volume15
    journal issue2
    journal titleJournal of Pipeline Systems Engineering and Practice
    identifier doi10.1061/JPSEA2.PSENG-1447
    journal fristpage04024002-1
    journal lastpage04024002-9
    page9
    treeJournal of Pipeline Systems Engineering and Practice:;2024:;Volume ( 015 ):;issue: 002
    contenttypeFulltext
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