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    Pitting in the water/hydrocarbon boundary region of pipelines - Effect of corrosion inhibitors

    Access Status
    Fulltext not available
    Authors
    Schmitt, G.
    Karbasi, G.
    Nešic, S.
    Hausler, R.
    Kinsella, Brian
    Brown, B.
    Date
    2013
    Type
    Conference Paper
    
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Schmitt, G. and Karbasi, G. and Nešic, S. and Hausler, R. and Kinsella, B. and Brown, B. 2013. Pitting in the water/hydrocarbon boundary region of pipelines - Effect of corrosion inhibitors.
    Source Title
    NACE - International Corrosion Conference Series
    ISBN
    9781627481458
    School
    School of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/55191
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    The boundary conditions leading to pitting in pipelines in the water/hydrocarbon (HC) interface region of the bottom-of-The-line (BOL) liquid were studied using electrochemical noise (ECN) with specially developed evaluation software. It was proved that intermittent surface wetting with HC and brine can increase the likelihood of pitting in the HC/brine boundary region of the pipeline steel. The frequency of the phase boundary movement affects the pitting intensity. Corrosive effects were strongly dependent on the presence of inhibitors, its concentration and phase behaviour influenced by isopropanol. Increasing the inhibitor concentration mitigates pit formation in all surface regions. ECN measurements in combination with the in-house developed evaluation software proved to be a sensitive tool to quantify parameter effects in short exposure times. © 2013 by NACE International.

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