Advances in corrosion control during sea water pumping in mild steel pipelines

- Organization:
- International Mineral Processing Congress
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 378 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2014
Abstract
The shortage of water supply in some regions of the globe is particularly problematic and forces mining companies to adopt alternatives like pumping sea water from the ocean up to the mining sites. Although deaeration of sea water or the use of lined pipelines are known options to prevent corrosion during pumping, a recent development of a new corrosion inhibitor allowed the use of simple mild steel pipelines for this purpose. The objective of this study is to demonstrate the recent advances of this technology in protecting against not only general corrosion but localized corrosion, main cause of corrosion-related pipeline failures. Corrosion studies were carried out using electrochemical techniques, weight loss balance as well microscopy surface analysis in order to measure and therefore evaluate the treatment efficiency. The right dosage of corrosion inhibitors may vary depending on water composition and characteristics of each system. Differences were observed depending on the sea water source. Pretreatment of metallic surface impacts the observed corrosion rate which can be as low as 3.6 mpy. The absence of pitting or localized corrosion was achieved in aerated seawater.
Citation
APA:
(2014) Advances in corrosion control during sea water pumping in mild steel pipelinesMLA: Advances in corrosion control during sea water pumping in mild steel pipelines. International Mineral Processing Congress, 2014.