goomba
Mechanical
- Jan 16, 2003
- 15
I have a finned cooling coil constructed from 304L stainless steel. It is installed in an oven that is operated at a temperature of 175°C. During the cooling cycle, chilled water is pumped through the coil. At the beginning of the cooling cycle, water is fed into the coil at the full rate of about 12 gpm. This imposes a thermal shock on the coil and occurs approximately 8 times per day. After operation of approximately 2000 hours, some failures have occured which have been verified as chloride stress corrosion cracking. My question is this: If the coil was properly annealed, is it possible that stress could be developed in the material from the thermal shock? The material analysis showed rockwell hardness in the area of C34. If the coil was properly annealed it should have been in the area of B78.