Aaaah, ok,
Now I know what you're looking at.
Yes, how lined piped are either jointed or flanged is a key aspect to how they work.
For me "lined" pipe is made initially as a steel pipe welded together and then you line it by inserting a tube inside it and pressurising it back to the stell surface, or internally lining it past jointing. but then I'm a pipeline engineer not a plant piping man....
Where you have the lining coming over the flange surface so that is in compression then you're in a different world of pain as indeed creep and visco-elastic behaviour starts and the whole thing starts to leak after while under the higher contact forces of a class 300 system.
Often you end up with special end connectors made from super duplex or some other high resistance alloy which then seals the inner liner or you protect the contact surface from the lining material / coating using a flange that isn't impacted but pipe material that would otherwise fail.
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