bphil
Materials
- Oct 18, 2002
- 6
For those of you who are familiar with the Inlet quench of smelter's sulfuric acid plant, as you may expect, we are experiencing corrosion problem on this equipment...
The inlet quench is the area where hot SO2 (300 C) gas coming from Nickel or Copper smelter is quenched by weak acid spraying. Almost everything has been tried in this environment and everything is failing (Hastelloy C276, 904L, Alloy 20 and refractory lined 904L).
In a specific location of this equipment we have the following conditions:
3-10% H2SO4 mist
200-300 °C
No significant buildup
Here are my questions: Could I use lead bonded steel or lead bonded stainless steel for this environment? Will the lead resist the sulfuric acid concentration at the temperature? Has anybody ever tried lead in those concentration and temperature?
Thanks if somebody has an answer, if you don't have a solution, I'll understand as this is a generalized problem throughout all acid plants.
Phil
The inlet quench is the area where hot SO2 (300 C) gas coming from Nickel or Copper smelter is quenched by weak acid spraying. Almost everything has been tried in this environment and everything is failing (Hastelloy C276, 904L, Alloy 20 and refractory lined 904L).
In a specific location of this equipment we have the following conditions:
3-10% H2SO4 mist
200-300 °C
No significant buildup
Here are my questions: Could I use lead bonded steel or lead bonded stainless steel for this environment? Will the lead resist the sulfuric acid concentration at the temperature? Has anybody ever tried lead in those concentration and temperature?
Thanks if somebody has an answer, if you don't have a solution, I'll understand as this is a generalized problem throughout all acid plants.
Phil