Bob511
Chemical
- Aug 9, 2008
- 5
Hi,
I have been asked by one of my friends who work in maintenance to give him an advice on the corrosion of SS inside their dryer. They work in the salt business and they dry the wet salt inside a direct fired dryer. It seems that there is some kind of acid that eveolves during the drying process. I do not know what kind of acids that could evolve from drying salt. The only thing i can think of is HCl because they have some 0.05% of MgCl2 in their salt. Maybe this mag chloride is hydrtated and while drying it undergoes hydrolysis and HCl will evolve. They have some small percntage of magnesium and sodium sulfate too. The SS 316 is being eaten up within few years because of this alleged acid gas and now they are thinking of using some expensive alloy.
Does anybody have a suggestion as to what kind of acid (or anything else) that is being produced in the drying process that will cause the SS to fail tha fast?
Thank you.
I have been asked by one of my friends who work in maintenance to give him an advice on the corrosion of SS inside their dryer. They work in the salt business and they dry the wet salt inside a direct fired dryer. It seems that there is some kind of acid that eveolves during the drying process. I do not know what kind of acids that could evolve from drying salt. The only thing i can think of is HCl because they have some 0.05% of MgCl2 in their salt. Maybe this mag chloride is hydrtated and while drying it undergoes hydrolysis and HCl will evolve. They have some small percntage of magnesium and sodium sulfate too. The SS 316 is being eaten up within few years because of this alleged acid gas and now they are thinking of using some expensive alloy.
Does anybody have a suggestion as to what kind of acid (or anything else) that is being produced in the drying process that will cause the SS to fail tha fast?
Thank you.