Thank you EdStailess.
I mean how much I need.
My environment is a CO2 rich Amine, I have chosen the pipes material as CS and 304 Cladding.
I need to know how to caclulate the cladding thickness knowing all the operational conditions.
I am sorry to not define the nature of the cladding because I am new in the cladding field.
If it is roll or explosion clad then it just needs to be there, how thin can you work with? I have seen 0.060" used with Ni alloys. It depends on what you fabricator is familiar with and who you are getting material from.
There is no corrosion allowance used with SS, when it fails it will be localized corrosion (pitting) so thickness is not relevant.
Assuming that the pressure bearing carbon steel is relatively thin, roll bonded or explosion bonded I the method to be used. Standard thicknesses are 0.060" and 0.109". If there is minor chloride present, use 316.
Though there may be a tempering effect from the amine, think the chloride pitting resistance for SS304 is still poor - a materials selection engineer should advise / confirm.
Using cladded pipes may turn out to be a nightmare during construction.
Thank you for your responses. My environment is rich amine: I think using Cladded CS or some internal pipe coatings in place of Stainless steel. are there any suggestions related to this issue?
ID clad pipe is usually only cost effective for larger diameters.
If you are welding the pipe then the procedures are fairly involved.
Don't get hung up on 316 vs 304. Unless you specify 316L with Cr and Mo above the spec midpoint it will have no better Cl pitting resistance than 304L.