btg,
I have specified carbon steel tanks holding 98% H2SO4.
Usually, the problem with this concentrated acid is corrosion due to dillution (a corroded band appears on the inside of the tank where dilluted acid forms) or corrosion due to acid velocity within a tank of piping system (a good rule of thumb is to keep the velocity very low... 2-4 feet/second)
Corrosion of carbon steel accelerates when this acid is stored above 125F....Lower temperatures are better
I agree with "unclesyd"........I do not understand why you would want to insulate or heat trace this piping. Heavy walled ( Sch 160 ?) carbon steel piping is best
There is some good H2SO4 information on the internet, available from the acid vendors....
The NACE standard mentioned above applies to tanks built since 1994.
These tanks often incorporate some or all of the recommendations listed in NACE International, Recommended Practice RP3294-94 (Design, Fabrication, and Inspection of Tanks for the Storage of Concentrated Sulfuric Acid and Oleum at Ambient Temperatures).
Perhaps, you are thinking of heat tracing to increase the flow rate ? Is the acid pumped or somehow gravity fed ?
My thoughts only
MJC
"There comes a time in the affairs of man when he must take the bull by the tail and face the situation." W.C. Fields