daviddem
Petroleum
- Sep 8, 2012
- 3
Hello, I am new here and I would like to submit a problem.
The situation is as follows:
- a braided steel cable lies inside a steel pipe (not sure of the steel grades, but this is mild, not stainless)
- the steel of the cable is zinc-plated supposedly because the Zn layer acts as a sacrificial anode, which protects the steel of the cable from galvanic corrosion
- inside the pipe a NaOH solution (pH 10) flows almost continuously
- pressure inside the pipe is about 5000 psi
- temperature inside the pipe is about 250 degF
We observe severe corrosion of the cable. Within about four months, the steel braids show visible signs of corrosion and have become very brittle. We also observe corrosion on the low side of the pipe (where the cable lies), to the point that pinholes can develop.
We have been at odds of identifying the exact causes of the problem. However we recently stumbled on the below redox equation, which would suggest that the NaOH could possibly rapidly eat up the Zn protective tlayer, leaving the bare steel open to galvanic corrosion:
Zn + 2 H2O + 2 NaOH → Na2Zn(OH)4 + H2
Since fresh NaOH solution is constantly supplied by the flow (this is not closed-circuit), I would think that the reaction would be complete until no Zn at all is left?
So the question is: is it possible that this is what is happening? Can steel and steel (cable and pipe) corrode each other once the Zn has been chewed up by the NaOH?
Any help, insight, comment, suggestion welcome.
The situation is as follows:
- a braided steel cable lies inside a steel pipe (not sure of the steel grades, but this is mild, not stainless)
- the steel of the cable is zinc-plated supposedly because the Zn layer acts as a sacrificial anode, which protects the steel of the cable from galvanic corrosion
- inside the pipe a NaOH solution (pH 10) flows almost continuously
- pressure inside the pipe is about 5000 psi
- temperature inside the pipe is about 250 degF
We observe severe corrosion of the cable. Within about four months, the steel braids show visible signs of corrosion and have become very brittle. We also observe corrosion on the low side of the pipe (where the cable lies), to the point that pinholes can develop.
We have been at odds of identifying the exact causes of the problem. However we recently stumbled on the below redox equation, which would suggest that the NaOH could possibly rapidly eat up the Zn protective tlayer, leaving the bare steel open to galvanic corrosion:
Zn + 2 H2O + 2 NaOH → Na2Zn(OH)4 + H2
Since fresh NaOH solution is constantly supplied by the flow (this is not closed-circuit), I would think that the reaction would be complete until no Zn at all is left?
So the question is: is it possible that this is what is happening? Can steel and steel (cable and pipe) corrode each other once the Zn has been chewed up by the NaOH?
Any help, insight, comment, suggestion welcome.