Gnoom
Mechanical
- Jun 14, 2013
- 10
Hi everybody,
I've been doing some searching in various threads of the forum, but I still remain with some doubts on this topic: I've seen various plants that use the typical NPT stainless steel ball valves in Carbon Steel piping, for example for vents and drains on cooling water piping, instrument connections compressed air and nitrogen piping, etc, but I'm not too sure if this is an often seen combination because of galvanic corrosion. Also, people seem to get vary scared by the idea of connecting a stainless steel flange to a carbon steel flange because of galvanic corrosion. There are some good commercial available solutions for this matter so this is an issue easy to solve. Here are my doubts:
First of all, does somebody have bad experiences with NPT SS valves in CS piping because of galvanic corrosion? If you basically only have good experiences, also let me know. Brass / Bronze valves should even be worse than SS valves with CS piping and even worse galvanized CS piping (a higher electrochemical voltage); if somebody has good experiences with those, also please let me know.
Second of all, is it correct to assume that when you connect a SS flange to a CS flange, you are talking about a lot of mass behind each material group and therefore it could cause way more galvanic corrosion, than what would be the case for instance for a tiny 1/2" SS ball valve on a big CS pipe? (assume for instance as a fluid / electrolyte cooling water in an open circuit with cooling water towers).
Is normally the internal corrosion critical for these cases, or can the external corrosion (outdoors, unsheltered) be just as important?
Thanks in advance for your help
I've been doing some searching in various threads of the forum, but I still remain with some doubts on this topic: I've seen various plants that use the typical NPT stainless steel ball valves in Carbon Steel piping, for example for vents and drains on cooling water piping, instrument connections compressed air and nitrogen piping, etc, but I'm not too sure if this is an often seen combination because of galvanic corrosion. Also, people seem to get vary scared by the idea of connecting a stainless steel flange to a carbon steel flange because of galvanic corrosion. There are some good commercial available solutions for this matter so this is an issue easy to solve. Here are my doubts:
First of all, does somebody have bad experiences with NPT SS valves in CS piping because of galvanic corrosion? If you basically only have good experiences, also let me know. Brass / Bronze valves should even be worse than SS valves with CS piping and even worse galvanized CS piping (a higher electrochemical voltage); if somebody has good experiences with those, also please let me know.
Second of all, is it correct to assume that when you connect a SS flange to a CS flange, you are talking about a lot of mass behind each material group and therefore it could cause way more galvanic corrosion, than what would be the case for instance for a tiny 1/2" SS ball valve on a big CS pipe? (assume for instance as a fluid / electrolyte cooling water in an open circuit with cooling water towers).
Is normally the internal corrosion critical for these cases, or can the external corrosion (outdoors, unsheltered) be just as important?
Thanks in advance for your help