Horizontal rotating cylinder - A compact apparatus for studying the effect of water wetting on carbon dioxide corrosion of mild steel


Autoria(s): Nesic, S.; Carroll, F.
Data(s)

01/12/2003

Resumo

Water wetting is a crucial issue in carbon dioxide (CO.) corrosion of multiphase flow pipelines made from mild steel. This study demonstrates the use of a novel benchtop apparatus, a horizontal rotating cylinder, to study the effect of water wetting on CO2 corrosion of mild steel in two-phase flow. The setup is similar to a standard rotating cylinder except for its horizontal orientation and the presence of two phases-typically water and oil. The apparatus has been tested by using mass-transfer measurements and CO2 corrosion measurements in single-phase water flow. CO2 corrosion measurements were subsequently performed using a water/hexane mixture with water cuts varying between 5% and 50%. While the metal surface was primarily hydrophilic under stagnant. conditions, a variety of dynamic water wetting situations was encountered as the water cut and fluid velocity were altered. Threshold velocities were identified at various water cuts when the surface became oil-wet and corrosion stopped.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:64811

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

National Association of Corrosion Engineers

Palavras-Chave #Materials Science, Multidisciplinary #Metallurgy & Metallurgical Engineering #Carbon Dioxide Corrosion #Flow #Mild Steel #Pipelines #Water Wetting #Entrainment #Oil #Model #Air #C1 #291802 Heat and Mass Transfer Operations #780102 Physical sciences
Tipo

Journal Article