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Use of Viton in sour service

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JasonLouie

Materials
Aug 13, 2007
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Hello,
I have found conflicting information regarding the use of Viton in sour service. Does anyone have experience with Viton in sour service and is there a H2S limit for Viton?
Thanks!
 
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Jason,

As the previous resonder aluded to, there are now several different types/grades of Viton, so you need to be very specific when specifying elastomers using this tradename. Traditional vinylidene fluoride-based fluorelastomers (ASTM D 1418 designation of FKM) are not suitable for sour conditions. Many of the Viton grades are FKM elastomers. Newer formulations like VTR-8802 are copolymers of tetrafluoroethylene and propylene, called either TFE/P or FEPM which is the ASTM D 1418 designation. This type of fluoroelastomer is suitable for sour service. The other type of elastomer that has good resistance to H[sub]2[/sub]S is called perfluoroelastomer (FFKM designation). Kalrez is the DuPont tradename for these materials. Go to the DuPont Elastomers website for more info:

 
Don't just rely on the elastomer manufacturer's compatibility charts. Get any recommendations backed up with NORSOK M-701 test reports for both sour ageing and rapid gas decompression resistance ensuring that the data is commensurate with your proposed design conditions.

Steve Jones
Materials & Corrosion Engineer
 
this is the NACE standard for evaluation of elastomeric materials in sour service:

NACE TM0187-2003 Evaluating elastomeric materials in sour gas environments

these reports from HSE can give you some good advise:

Elastomers for fluid containment in offshore oil
and gas production: Guidelines and review

Elastomeric seals for rapid gas decompression applications in high-pressure services



hope this help

S
 
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