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Material to use with Urea 99% at 140 Deg, 20 Bar for flowmeter

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HoumanK

Mechanical
Joined
Jan 20, 2012
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4
Hello.

I have been assigned to choose a mass flowmeter to measure 99% urea at 140 Deg C and 20 bar.

I have been checking Endress+Hauser and Krohne documents,and:

E+H recommends only Ti tube for temp < 100 Deg

Krohne recommends either SS 316 or Ti for temp < 90 Deg.

However, beside that this will require the flow to be cooled; it also required to completely change the flow as I believe 99% urea flow will crystallize at temp < 135 deg or so.

I am at a loss currently as I can't find enough data on corrosivity of a rather pure urea flow. Is it even corrosive to being with?

Thanks for the help.
 
The Outokumpu corrosion guide lists the following data.
This suggests that 317L or 904L would be suitable at higher temps as would Ti.
I would be leery of 316L in these conditions.

Urea
CO(NH2)2
Temp. °C: 180

4438 : 0
4439 : 0
904L : 0
Ti : 0




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Plymouth Tube
 
Thank you!

May I ask if the table is referring to the pure melted Urea?

Also, what does the 0 numbers in from of the materials stand for?
 
Zero or close to zero corrosion.
 
thx, but won't that be in contradiction with both E+H and Krohne's suggestion for temp. < 100 for Titanium?
 
WOW!

Thanks a lot for the link, I didn't know they provide their tables online!

Based on their tables, corrosion for Standard Cr-Ni-Mo is also '0'.

I believe 316l, which is the normal stainless steel material for flowmeters tube, falls under this category?
 
I wouldn't. The old European 316 ran higher chemistry than is typical in the US today.
I would step up.

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
Plymouth Tube
 
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