The question you have to ask yourself is "how will this chemical be distributed?". All of the pipeline chemicals that I know of are intended to be transported in a continuous phase liquid. Gas just doesn't have the mass to transport much liquid very far.
With aerosol injection, the collisions of the droplets with other droplets and/or with the pipe walls will end up with zero buoyant droplets within a few dozen feet. When I've cut open pipe with aerosol injection, I never find any chemical after the first or second sag in the pipe. Aerosol injection is worse than worthless.
Liquid injection is just as bad, but less expensive.
Batching chemical behind a pig can work, but getting the batch size right (i.e., put in enough that there is still some left when the pigs arrive) can be a challenge and I usually see the pigs arrive stone dry and no one knows how far the line is protected.
I have never seen a "protected" line with a lower failure incidence rate than a line in similar service without chemical injection. Never. Not once.
I have also never seen a corrosion failure in lines that are regularly pigged. Getting rid of the water is the only effective corrosion treatment that I've ever seen in "dry gas" lines (the term "dry gas" in my industry means "gas without hydrocarbon liquids", I've never seen a line with zero water in it--even dehydrated mainline pipes will accumulate some amount of water in cold places).
David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering
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