Ammonium Chloride Corrosion
in Hydrotreating Units
Description
of Damage
Ammonium chloride corrosion
is characterized by general or localized corrosion, often
pitting, normally occurring under ammonium chloride or amine
salt deposits, and often in the absence of a free water phase.
The salts have a whitish, greenish or brownish appearance.
Corrosion due to deposition of ammonium chloride salts is
only a problem when it occurs at temperatures above the dewpoint.
At temperatures below the dewpoint, the deposits will be washed
away by the condensed water. The attached references
from Refincor summarize descriptions, locations of damage,
corrosion rates and rules of thumb for corrosion by ammonium
chloride salts reported by other refiners in more than 50
years of documenting NACE T-8 Refining Committee open discussions
on corrosion in refineries.
Affected
Materials
All commonly used materials
are susceptible, in order of increasing resistance: carbon
steel, low alloy steels, 300 series SS, Alloys 400, duplex
SS, 800, and 825, Alloys 625 and C276 and titanium. The 300
series stainless steels can also experience chloride stress
corrosion cracking in contact with ammonium chloride deposits.
Environmental
Factors
-
Concentration (NH3, HCl,
H20 or amine salts), temperature and water
availability are the critical factors.
-
Ammonium chloride salts may precipitate
from high temperature streams as they are cooled, depending
upon the concentration of NH 3 and HCl, and
may corrode piping and equipment at temperatures well
above the water dewpoint [~300 oF (149 oC)].
Figure 1 shows a curve
where deposition of ammonium chloride salts are predicted,
based on the partial pressures of ammonia and hydrogen
chloride.
-
Ammonium chloride salts are hygroscopic,
and readily absorb water. A small amount of water can
lead to very aggressive corrosion ~360 mpy, depending
on the temperature.
-
Ammonium chloride and amine hydrochloride
salts are highly water soluble, highly corrosive and form
an acidic solution when mixed with water. Some neutralizing
amines react with chlorides to form amine hydrochlorides
that can act in a similar fashion.
Affected
Equipment
Reactor effluent streams
are subject to ammonium chloride salt fouling and corrosion
at temperatures up to ~300F. Corrosion due to ammonium chloride
salts is more difficult to predict than with ammonium bisulfide
salts due to the higher temperature limits and unpredictability
of deposition location, based on temperature and HCL/ammonia
partial pressures. Inspecting for ammonium chloride corrosion
is best done based on prior inspection observations, process
stream sampling, input from process engineers and industry
experience. If the inlet feed has negligible nitrogen content,
then ammonium chloride salt corrosion may not be active. The
attached Refincor references document the experience of other
refiners with proven and suspected ammonium chloride salt
corrosion. Locations of detected ammonium chloride salt corrosion
included HDS effluent exchangers and a hydrotreater desulfurizer
prefractionator feed/bottoms exchanger.
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