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Piping Identification 1

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ChemEngr77

Chemical
Oct 18, 2014
3
I am a Chemical Engineer working in a hydrocarbons facility. How do we visually identify the difference between Carbon Steel (CS) and Low Temperature CArbon Steel (LTCS)? The piping has already been erected on-site.
 
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Check the mill test certificate. Identify the alloying elements heavier than 21 atomic number. Do a little surface preparation on the structural members by grinding and prepare a clean surface. Perform PMI (Positive metal identification ) by portable XRF analyzer.
I've replied in context of steels under A203 ASTM specs which also fall in LTCS family.
 
You will not be able to visually differentiate between them unless material specification & grade are stenciled on the outside of the pipe. There are optimum chemistries for this but you will not be able to distinguish from run-of-the-mill carbon steel. The property that really differentiates is low temperature fracture toughness/Charpy impact energy, which you obviously cannot test nondestructively. This is why finding the certs has been suggested.
 
By the specifications markings on the pipe placed on by the mill initially. You should also have had the pipe color coded. A-333 gr 6 is made to fine grain melting practice which involve the addition of small quantities of Al, Nb and/or V or combinations thereof. You will need to PMI analyze for all three elements.

Also examine the records from the pipe fab shop for the systems involved.
 
Agree with Weldstan
you may verify using PMI to identified that on site. Than you analysis main alloying which you found by PMI.
 
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