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CO2 corrosion inside gas pipelines 1

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Kiranpatel

Petroleum
Joined
Apr 15, 2002
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19
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FR
I am looking at a wet gas pipeline with a small quantitiy of C02 in the gas composition (1 to 2 % mol). The pipeline pressure is in the rage of 5 to 10 bars.
I think I remember, from a long time ago, about a rule of thumb which states that, below a certain value of partial pressure of CO2, the reactions between the CO2 and the water can be regarded as insufficient to initiate any significant internal corrosion.
Am I talking rubbish ?
If not, can anybody throw some more light on this rule of thumb (what is the threshold value of the partial pressure)?
 
Try the Corrosion Engineering Forum
 
You may wish to refer to gas quality specifications in gas company contracts that address CO2 primarily to limit corrosion I suppose. Pipeline pressure, steel composition, and trace gas constituents such as oxygen, hydrogen and sulfur may also be important factors.
 
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