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Proper design and fabrication, heat treatment and inspection practices play a vital role in achieving good quality and performance of low alloy steel piping. These materials have narrower fabrication windows as the alloy content goes up and non-adherence to correct execution practices may lead to leakage by delayed hydrogen cracking, stress corrosion cracking or fatigue resulting in unplanned shutdowns and costly repairs.This paper describes details about strengths and weaknesses of support design and fabrication practices for such attachment welds. The paper discusses various precautions to be taken during the design and fabrication stages for low alloy steel supports attachment welds. It will discuss heat treatment cycles viz. preheat, interpass, dehydrogenation treatment (post heating) and post weld heat treatment (PWHT). The control of consumables, welding environment conditions, and the weld heating cycle is essential to prevent hydrogen assisted cold cracking in high hardness microstructures in weld and HAZ, and for achieving successful relief of residual welding stresses.
Process equipment which employs a corrosion resistant alloy (CRA) layer cladded to steel is common in refineries, petrochemical plants and other plants processing highly corrosive media. There are two regularly employed methods for welding attachments and internals to clad process vessels. One is to remove the CRA cladding for welding the attachment to the steel base metal assuming dissimilar welds and restoring CRA by weld overlay. The other eliminates the step of removing the cladding, simplifying the attachment process by direct welding of the internals onto the clad layer. With the lack of data to prove the integrity of direct welding attachment onto the clad layer, designers frequently demand the cladding be removed or allow only a conservatively low stress limit for what can be attached directly to the clad surface. It is well understood that eliminating the step of removing clad increases the simplicity, improves the lead-time, and reduces the cost of making these attachments for trays or other internals, but there are concerns about clad disbonding risks. With the aim to provide data around the integrity of direct welding attachments for better risk assessments, a technical study was undertaken. In this study, it will be shown that the bond between clad material and the base steel is robust enough to withstand the heaviest attachments and harshest conditions. The theory behind the technical study will be presented along with the results of this study
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With increasing oil & gas demand and depletion of sweet reserves, oil & gas companies in the regionaleconomies are focusing towards the exploitation of sour resources. This necessitates the use of pipelinesand down-hole tubing made from special steels with significant resistance to hydrogen-induced cracking(HIC). These steels are produced through specific technologies for enhanced chemical composition controland microstructural engineering to incorporate the required strength, weld ability and improved HICresistance. It is well established that the HIC initiates at sites with microstructural heterogeneities whetherdue to presence of gross nonmetallic inclusions or the micro-structural constituents. The presence of centralsegregation further aggravates the conditions particularly when the final pipe sizes require the longitudinalslitting of the coils. Presence of non-metallic inclusions in the steel makes it vulnerable to hydrogen-inducedcracking under wet H2S environment. The mechanism of HIC begins with the generation of hydrogen atomsby corrosion reaction of H2S and Fe in the presence of free water. The hydrogen atoms then diffuse intosteel and accumulate around the inclusions. The higher number of inclusions equates to the more sitesavailable for hydrogen adsorption. Recombination of hydrogen atoms to H2 molecules builds up a heavygas pressure in the interface between matrix and inclusions. Cracking initiates because of the tensile stressfield caused by hydrogen gas pressure and crack propagates in the surrounding steel matrix. Thelongitudinal slitting exposes the internal microstructural abnormalities to the skelp edges which are thenincorporated in the thermally stressed weld zone. While the post-weld heat treatment (PWHT) mostlyhomogenizes the weld zone microstructure, the presence of excessive central line features cannot becompletely removed thereby making this zone more prone to HIC attack
This paper details with the unexpected cracking encountered in the outlet nozzles of all three reactors for Platformer unit, during a scheduled shutdown. The unit was commissioned in 1957 and the reactors metallurgy is as per withdrawn ASTM standard, A301 Gr. B (1Cr-1/2Mo). The isolated cracks were located at the upstream edge of the inset nozzle and running vertically down. The cracking in the high-pressure fixed bed reactor outlet nozzles was successfully repaired in-situ. This paper reviews the circumstances which led to these failures and highlights the lessons learned from each failure.