PeteBennett
Mechanical
- Aug 21, 2003
- 11
I have a client who is having corrosion problems on a stainless steel heat exchanger skid.
At the start the brazed heat exchangers (s/s plates) were literally being eaten away (secondary side). I thought this could be a production fault so replaced the unit with another one. This lasted a mere three months, and even the threaded connections were eaten away. So I started from scratch, cleaned the system out (just in case) supplied a new unit and replaced all connections. But now the heat exchanger is fine, but the heat exchanger threaded connections are still being eaten away.
The system primary side (stream) is 3 Barg LP sat (conditioned) steam @ 275kW and the secondary side (potable tap water) is running 10-65degrees celcius at 1.2 litres/sec.
I thought origonally this could be effect of over chlorination (UK we chlorinate our tap water), but this is the only exchanger on site suffering.
Has anyone any ideas, experience of, or a solution? Have to admit I am stumped and don't want to run a guessing game operation to solve.
At the start the brazed heat exchangers (s/s plates) were literally being eaten away (secondary side). I thought this could be a production fault so replaced the unit with another one. This lasted a mere three months, and even the threaded connections were eaten away. So I started from scratch, cleaned the system out (just in case) supplied a new unit and replaced all connections. But now the heat exchanger is fine, but the heat exchanger threaded connections are still being eaten away.
The system primary side (stream) is 3 Barg LP sat (conditioned) steam @ 275kW and the secondary side (potable tap water) is running 10-65degrees celcius at 1.2 litres/sec.
I thought origonally this could be effect of over chlorination (UK we chlorinate our tap water), but this is the only exchanger on site suffering.
Has anyone any ideas, experience of, or a solution? Have to admit I am stumped and don't want to run a guessing game operation to solve.