I wasn't exactly sure which forum to post this in, so please move it to the appropriate one if necessary.
I'm a chemical engineer, and we're building a really small pilot plant right now. The piping is threaded and doesn't go above 1".
As usual, I've been called in on the tail of a project like this to fix problems, so I didn't get a chance to be involved in purchasing and most of the erection. The main reactor for this plant is a 304 SS vessel (my boss worries about some corrosion issues inside of it, plus we just had the vessel sitting around and it was the right size. However, a lot of the piping simply needs to be carbon steel. What I have now is an amalgamation of carbon pipe, a stainless reactor, and a mix of stainless and carbon threaded fittings (mostly bushings and valves). For the purposes of this pilot plant, this will be fine, though it annoys me.
My question however, is what can I expect out of these stainless fittings that have been threaded to carbon pipe. Are they contaminated with carbon and can no longer be used as stainless fittings if I need the properties of stainless? Is there some threshold where I might be okay to to use some of these fittings with in a totally stainless system in some cases but not others? Or are they basically the equivalent of expensive carbon steel fittings now? Luckily, they're small, but we have a lot of stainless valves, which probably weren't super cheap that I might like to reuse.
Probably a dumb side question, but is there any way to realistically decontaminate stainless after it's been "contaminated" with carbon steel, whether it's plate or forgings or whatever? Say someone cut a stainless pipe with the saw with a saw that's supposed to only be for carbon.
(As a side question, I'm always been told to separate your cutting and grinding tools when when working on carbon vs stainless to avoid the stainless contamination. We try to do this, but I've never understood how rigorous we need to be. If anyone has some tips or maybe a link to some information describing how to properly handle this, that would really help me out with out QC system.)
Sorry for the rambling, multifaceted question. I like to think I have good mechanical knowledge for a ChemE but, I'm still a ChemE, and I'm behind the gun on this plant which is going to require a lot of modifications. And I have a dentist's appointment I'm about to be late to. I'll appreciate whatever answers I can get. Thanks.
I'm a chemical engineer, and we're building a really small pilot plant right now. The piping is threaded and doesn't go above 1".
As usual, I've been called in on the tail of a project like this to fix problems, so I didn't get a chance to be involved in purchasing and most of the erection. The main reactor for this plant is a 304 SS vessel (my boss worries about some corrosion issues inside of it, plus we just had the vessel sitting around and it was the right size. However, a lot of the piping simply needs to be carbon steel. What I have now is an amalgamation of carbon pipe, a stainless reactor, and a mix of stainless and carbon threaded fittings (mostly bushings and valves). For the purposes of this pilot plant, this will be fine, though it annoys me.
My question however, is what can I expect out of these stainless fittings that have been threaded to carbon pipe. Are they contaminated with carbon and can no longer be used as stainless fittings if I need the properties of stainless? Is there some threshold where I might be okay to to use some of these fittings with in a totally stainless system in some cases but not others? Or are they basically the equivalent of expensive carbon steel fittings now? Luckily, they're small, but we have a lot of stainless valves, which probably weren't super cheap that I might like to reuse.
Probably a dumb side question, but is there any way to realistically decontaminate stainless after it's been "contaminated" with carbon steel, whether it's plate or forgings or whatever? Say someone cut a stainless pipe with the saw with a saw that's supposed to only be for carbon.
(As a side question, I'm always been told to separate your cutting and grinding tools when when working on carbon vs stainless to avoid the stainless contamination. We try to do this, but I've never understood how rigorous we need to be. If anyone has some tips or maybe a link to some information describing how to properly handle this, that would really help me out with out QC system.)
Sorry for the rambling, multifaceted question. I like to think I have good mechanical knowledge for a ChemE but, I'm still a ChemE, and I'm behind the gun on this plant which is going to require a lot of modifications. And I have a dentist's appointment I'm about to be late to. I'll appreciate whatever answers I can get. Thanks.