PRESSURE VESSEL GUIDELINES
(reproduced courtesy of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration) OSHA
A. Introduction
B. Recent Cracking Experience in Pressure Vessels
C. Nondestructive Examination Methods
D. Information for Safety Assessment
E. Bibliography
Recent inspection programs for metallic pressure containment vessels and
tanks have revealed cracking and damage in a considerable number of the
vessels inspected.
Safety and hazard evaluations of pressure vessels, as also presented in OSHA
Instruction PUB 8-1.5, need to consider the consequences of a leakage or a
rupture failure of a vessel.
Two consequences result from a complete rupture:
* Blast effects due to sudden expansion of the pressurized
fluid; and
* Fragmentation damage and injury, if vessel rupture occurs.
For a leakage failure, the hazard consequences can range from no effect to
very serious effects:
* Suffocation or poisoning, depending on the nature
of the contained fluid, if the leakage occurs into a closed space;
* Fire and explosion for a flammable fluid are
included as a physical hazard; and
* Chemical and thermal burns from contact with process liquids.
Only pressure vessels and low pressure storage tanks widely used in process,
pulp and paper, petroleum refining, and petrochemical industries and for
water treatment systems of boilers and steam generation equipment are covered
in this chapter. Excluded are vessels and tanks used in many other
applications and also excludes other parts of a pressure containment system
such as piping and valves.
The types and applications of pressure vessels included and excluded in this
chapter are summarized in Table III:3-1. An illustration of a schematic
pressure vessel is presented in Figure III:3-1.
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NOTE: Though this review of pressure vessels excludes inspection or
evaluation of safety release valves, the compliance officer should be aware
that NO valves or T-fittings should be present between the vessel
and the safety relief valve.
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Pressure Vessel Design Codes. Most of the pressure or storage
vessels in service in the United States will have been designed and
constructed in accordance with one of the following two design codes:
* The ASME Code, or Section VIII of the ASME (American Society of
Mechanical Engineers) Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code; or
* The API Standard 620 or the American Petroleum Institute Code
which provides rules for lower pressure vessels not covered by the ASME
Code.
In addition, some vessels designed and constructed between 1934 to 1956 may
have used the rules in the API-ASME Code for Unfired Pressure Vessels for
Petroleum Liquids and Gases. This code was discontinued in 1956.
Vessels certification can only be performed by trained inspectors
qualified for each code. Written tests and practical experience are required
for certification. Usually, the compliance office is not equipped for this
task, but is able to obtain the necessary contract services.
VESSEL TYPES
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Vessels included: Vessel types specifically excluded:
Stationary and unfired Vessels used as fired boilers
Used for pressure Vessels used in high-temperature processes
containment of (above 315 degrees C, 600 degrees F) or
gases and liquids at very low and cryogenic temperatures
Constructed of carbon Vessels and containers used in transportable
steel or low alloy systems
steel
Operated at temperatures Storage tanks that operate at nominally
between -75 degrees and atmospheric pressure
315 degrees C (-100 and
600 degrees F)
Piping and pipelines
Safety and pressure-relief valves
Special-purpose vessels, such as those
for human occupancy.
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RECENT CRACKING EXPERIENCE IN PRESSURE VESSELS
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DEAERATOR SERVICE
Deaeration refers to the removal of noncondensible gases, primarily oxygen,
from the water used in a steam generation system.
Deaerators are widely used in many industrial applications including power
generation, pulp and paper, chemical, and petroleum refining and in many
public facilities such as hospitals and schools where steam generation is
required. In actual practice, the deaerator vessel can be separate from the
storage vessel or combined with a storage vessel into one unit.
Typical operational conditions for deaerator vessels range up to about 300
psi and up to about 150 degrees C (300 degrees F). Nearly all of the vessels
are designed to ASME Code resulting in vessel wall thicknesses up to but
generally less than 25 mm (1 in). The vessel material is almost universally
one of the carbon steel grades.
Analysis of incident survey data and other investigations has determined the
following features about the deaerator vessel cracking.
* Water hammer is the only design or operational factor
that correlates with cracking.
* Cracking is generally limited to weld regions of vessels
that had not been postweld heat treated.
* Corrosion fatigue appears to be the predominant
mechanism of crack formation and growth.
The failures and the survey results have prompted TAPPI (Technical
Association of Pulp and Paper Industry), the National Board of Boiler and
Pressure Vessel Inspectors, and NACE (National Association of Corrosion
Engineers) to prepare inspection, operation and repair recommendations.
For inspection, all recommendations suggest:
* Special attention to the internal surface of all welds and
heat-affected zones (HAZ); and
* Use of the wet fluorescent magnetic particle (WFMT) method for
inspection.
The TAPPI and the NACE recommendations also contain additional items, such
as:
* Inspection by personnel certified to American Society for
Nondestructive Testing's SNT-TC-1A minimum Level I and interpretation of the
results by minimum Level II; and
* Reinspection within one year for repaired vessels, 1-2 years
for vessels with discontinuities but unrepaired, and 3-5 years for vessels
found free of discontinuities.
AMINE SERVICE
The amine process is used to remove hydrogen sulfide (H(2)S) from petroleum
gases such as propane and butane. It is also used for carbon dioxide (CO(2))
removal in some processes. Amine is a generic term and includes
monoethanolamine (MEA), diethanolamine (DEA) and others in the amine group.
These units are used in petroleum refinery, gas treatment and chemical
plants.
The operating temperatures of the amine process are generally in the 38
degrees to 93 degrees C (100 degrees to 200 degrees F) range and therefore
the plant equipment is usually constructed from one of the carbon steel
grades. The wall thickness of the pressure vessels in amine plants is
typically about 25 mm (1 in).
Although the possibility of cracking of carbon steels in an amine
environment has been known for some years, real concern about safety
implications was highlighted by a 1984 failure of the amine process pressure
vessel. Overall, the survey found about 40% cracking incidence in a total of
294 plants. Cracking had occurred in the absorber/contactor, the regenerator
and the heat exchanger vessels, and in the piping and other auxiliary
equipment. Several of the significant findings of the survey were:
* All cracks were in or near welds.
* Cracking occurred predominantly in stressed or unrelieved (not
PWHT) welds.
* Cracking occurred in all amine vessel processes but was most
prevalent in MEA units.
* WFMT and UT (ultrasonic test) were the predominant detection
methods for cracks; internal examination by WFMT is the preferred
method.
Information from laboratory studies indicate that pure amine does not cause
cracking of carbon steels but amine with carbon dioxide in the gas phase
causes severe cracking. The presence or absence of chlorides, cyanides, or
hydrogen sulfide may also be factors but their full role in the cracking
mechanism are not completely known at present.
WET HYDROGEN SULFIDE
Wet Hydrogen Sulfide refers to any fluid containing water and hydrogen
sulfide (H(2)S). Hydrogen is generated when steel is exposed to this mixture
and the hydrogen can enter into the steel. Dissolved hydrogen can cause
cracking, blistering, and embrittlement.
The harmful effects of hydrogen generating environments on steel have been
known and recognized for a long time in the petroleum and petrochemical
industries. In particular, sensitivity to damage by hydrogen increases with
the hardness and strength of the steel and damage and cracking are more apt
to occur in high strength steels.
* Significant cracks can start from very small hard zones
associated with welds; these hard zones are not detected by conventional
hardness tests.
* Initially small cracks can grow by a stepwise form of hydrogen
blistering to form through thickness cracks.
* NACE/API limits on weld hardness may not be completely
effective in preventing cracking.
* Thermal stress relief (postweld heat treatment, PWHT) appears
to reduce the sensitivity to and the severity of cracking.
Wet hydrogen sulfide has also been found to cause service cracking in
liquified petroleum gas (LPG) storage vessels. The service cracking in the
LPG vessels occurs predominantly in the weld heat affected zone (HAZ). The
vessels are usually spherical with wall thickness in the 20 mm to 75 mm (0.8
in to 3 in) range.
Recommendations for new and existing wet hydrogen-sulfide vessels to
minimize the risk of a major failure include:
* Use lower-strength steels for new vessels;
* Schedule an early inspection for vessels more than five years
in service;
* Improve monitoring to minimize breakthrough of hydrogen
sulfide; and
* Replace unsafe vessels or downgrade to less-severe, usually
lower-pressure, service.
AMMONIA SERVICE
Commercial refrigeration systems, certain chemical processes, and
formulators of agricultural chemicals will be sites of ammonia service tanks.
Careful inspections of vessels used for storage of ammonia (in either vapor
or liquid form) in recent years have resulted in evidence of serious stress
corrosion cracking problems.
The vessels for this service are usually constructed as spheres from one of
the carbon steel grades, and they operate in the ambient temperature range.
The water and oxygen content in the ammonia has a strong influence on the
propensity of carbon steels to crack in this environment.
Cracks have a tendency to be found to be in or near the welds in as-welded
vessels. Cracks occur both transverse and parallel to the weld direction.
Thermal stress relieving seems to be a mitigating procedure for new vessels,
but its efficacy for older vessels after a period of operation is dubious
partly because small, undetected cracks may be present.
PULP DIGESTER SERVICE
The kraft pulping process is used in the pulp and paper industry to digest
the pulp in the papermaking process. The operation is done in a relatively
weak (a few percent) water solution of sodium hydroxide and sodium sulfide
typically in the 110 degrees to 140 degrees C (230 degrees to 285 degrees F)
temperature range. Since the early 1950s, a continuous version of this
process has been widely used. Nearly all of the vessels are ASME Code
vessels made using one of the carbon steel grades with typical design
conditions of 175 degrees to 180 degrees C (350 degrees to 360 degrees F) and
150 psig.
These vessels had a very good service record with only isolated reports of
cracking problems until the occurrence of a sudden rupture failure in 1980.
The inspection survey has revealed that about 65% of the properly inspected
vessels had some cracking. Some of the cracks were fabrication flaws
revealed by the use of more sensitive inspection techniques but most of the
cracking was service-induced. The inspection survey and analysis indicates
the following features about the cracking.
* All cracking was associated with welds.
* Wet fluorescent magnetic particle (WFMT) testing with proper
surface preparation was the most effective method of detecting the
cracking.
* Fully stress-relieved vessels were less susceptible.
* No clear correlation of cracking and noncracking could be found
with vessel age and manufacture or with process variables and
practices.
* Analysis and research indicate that the cracking is due to a
caustic stress corrosion cracking mechanism although its occurrence at the
relatively low caustic concentrations of the digester process was
unexpected.
Currently, preventive measures such as weld cladding, spray coatings, and
anodic protection are being studied, and considerable information has been
obtained. In the meantime, the recommended guideline is to perform an annual
examination.
SUMMARY OF SERVICE CRACKING EXPERIENCE
The preceding discussion shows a strong influence of chemical
environment on cracking incidence. This is a factor that is not
explicitly treated in most design codes. Service experience is the best and
often the only guide to in-service safety assessment.
For vessels and tanks within the scope of this document, the service
experience indicates that the emphasis of the inspection and safety
assessment should be on:
* Vessels in deaerator, amine, wet h3S, ammonia and pulp
digesting service;
* Welds and adjacent regions;
* Vessels that have not been thermally stress relieved (no PWHT
of fabrication welds); and
* Repaired vessels, especially those without PWHT after repair.
The evaluation of the severity of the detected cracks can be done by
fracture mechanics methods. This requires specific information about
stresses, material properties, and flaw indications. Generalized assessment
guidelines are not easy to formulate. However, fortunately, many vessels in
the susceptible applications listed above operate at relatively low stresses,
and therefore, cracks have a relatively smaller effect on structural
integrity and continued safe operation.
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NONDESTRUCTIVE EXAMINATION METHODS
Of the various conventional and advanced nondestructive examination (NDE)
methods, five are widely used for the examination of pressure vessels and
tanks by certified pressure vessel inspectors. The names and acronyms of
these common five methods are:
* VT Visual Examination,
* PT Liquid Penetrant Test,
* MT Magnetic Particle Test,
* RT Gamma and X-ray Radiography, and
* UT Ultrasonic Test.
VT, PT and MT can detect only those discontinuities and defects that are
open to the surface or are very near the surface. In contrast, RT and UT can
detect conditions that are located within the part. For these reasons, the
first three are often referred to as surface examination methods and the
last two as volumetric methods. Table II of PUB 8-1.5 summarizes the main
features of these five methods.
VISUAL EXAMINATION (VT)
A visual examination is easy to conduct and can cover a large area in a
short time.
It is very useful for assessing the general condition of the equipment and
for detecting some specific problems such as severe instances of corrosion,
erosion, and hydrogen blistering. The obvious requirements for a meaningful
visual examination are a clean surface and good illumination.
LIQUID PENETRANT TEST (PT)
This method depends on allowing a specially formulated liquid (penetrant) to
seep into an open discontinuity and then detecting the entrapped liquid by a
developing agent. When the penetrant is removed from the surface, some of it
remains entrapped in the discontinuities. Application of a developer draws
out the entrapped penetrant and magnifies the discontinuity. Chemicals which
fluoresce under black (ultraviolet) light can be added to the penetrant to
aid the detectability and visibility of the developed indications. The
essential feature of PT is that the discontinuity must be open, which means
a clean, undisturbed surface.
The PT method is independent of the type and composition of the metal alloy
so it can be used for the examination of austenitic stainless steels and
nonferrous alloys where the magnetic particle test is not applicable.
MAGNETIC PARTICLE TEST (MT)
This method depends on the fact that discontinuities in or near the surface
perturb magnetic flux lines induced into a ferromagnetic material. For a
component such as a pressure vessel where access is generally limited to one
surface at a time, the prod technique is widely used. The magnetic field is
produced in the region around and between the prods (contact probes) by an
electric current (either AC or DC) flowing between the prods. The
ferromagnetic material requirement basically limits the applicability of MT
to carbon and low-alloy steels.
The perturbations of the magnetic lines are revealed by applying fine
particles of a ferromagnetic material to the surface. The particles can be
either a dry powder or a wet suspension in a liquid. The particles can also
be treated to fluoresce under black light. These options lead to variations
such as the wet fluorescent magnetic particle test (WFMT).
MT has some capability for detecting subsurface defects. However, there is
no easy way to determine the limiting depth of sensitivity since it is highly
dependent on magnetizing current, material, and geometry and size of the
defect. A very crude approximation would be a depth no more than 1.5 mm to 3
mm (1/16 in to 1/8 in).
A very important precaution in performing MT is that corners and surface
irregularities also perturb the magnetic field. Therefore, examining for
defects in corners and near or in welds must be performed with extra care.
Another precaution is that MT is most sensitive to discontinuities which are
oriented transverse to the magnetic flux lines and this characteristic needs
to be taken into account in determining the procedure for inducing the
magnetic field.
RADIOGRAPHY (RT)
The basic principle of radiographic examination of metallic objects is the
same as in any other form of radiography such as medical radiography. Holes,
voids, and discontinuities decrease the attenuation of the X-ray and produce
greater exposure on the film (darker areas on the negative film).
Because RT depends on density differences, cracks with tightly closed
surfaces are much more difficult to detect than open voids. Also, defects
located in an area of a abrupt dimensional change are difficult to detect due
to the superimposed density difference. RT is effective in showing defect
dimensions on a plane normal to the beam direction but determination of the
depth dimension and location requires specialized techniques.
Since ionizing radiation is involved, field application of RT requires
careful implementation to prevent health hazards.
ULTRASONIC TESTING (UT)
The fundamental principles of ultrasonic testing of metallic materials are
similar to radar and related methods of using electromagnetic and acoustic
waves for detection of foreign objects. The distinctive aspect of UT for the
inspection of metallic parts is that the waves are mechanical, so the test
equipment requires three basic components.
* Electronic system for generating electrical signal.
* Transducer system to convert the electrical signal into
mechanical vibrations and vice versa and to inject the vibrations into and
extract them from the material.
* Electronic system for amplifying, processing and displaying the
return signal.
Very short signal pulses are induced into the material and waves reflected
back from discontinuities are detected during the receive mode. The
transmitting and detection can be done with one transducer or with two
separate transducers (the tandem technique).
Unlike radiography, UT in its basic form does not produce a permanent record
of the examination. However, more recent versions of UT equipment include
automated operation and electronic recording of the signals.
Ultrasonic techniques can also be used for the detection and measurement of
general material loss such as by corrosion and erosion. Since wave velocity
is constant for a specific material, the transit time between the initial
pulse and the back reflection is a measure of the travel distance and the
thickness.
DETECTION PROBABILITIES AND FLAW SIZING
The implementation of NDE (nondestructive examination) results for
structural integrity and safety assessment involves a detailed consideration
of two separate but interrelated factors.
* Detecting the discontinuity.
* Identifying the nature of the discontinuity and determining its
size.
Much of the available information on detection and sizing capabilities has
been developed for aircraft and nuclear power applications. This kind of
information is very specific to the nature of the flaw, the material, and the
details of the test technique, and direct transference to other situations is
not always warranted.
The overall reliability of NDE is obviously an important factor in a safety
and hazard assessment. Failing to detect or undersizing existing
discontinuities reduces the safety margin while oversizing errors can result
in unnecessary and expensive outages. High reliability results from a
combination of factors.
* Validated procedures, equipment and test personnel.
* Utilization of diverse methods and techniques.
* Application of redundancy by repetitive and independent tests.
Finally, it is useful to note that safety assessment depends on evaluating
the largest flaw that may be missed, not the smallest one that can be
found.
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INFORMATION FOR SAFETY ASSESSMENT
PUB 8-1.5 has a large amount of information on the design
rules, inspection requirements, and service experience, relevant to pressure
vessels and low pressure storage tanks used in general industrial
applications. Though the compliance officer is not usually qualified as a
pressure vessel inspector, as a summary and a reminder, Appendix III:3-1
outlines the information, data, and recordkeeping that are necessary, useful,
or indicative of safe management of operating vessels and tanks.
These records, besides the construction and maintenance logs usually are
kept by the plant engineer, maintenance supervisor, or facility manager, will
be indicative of the surveillance activities around safe operation of
pressure vessels.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
Chuse, R. 1984. Pressure Vessels: The ASME Code Simplified. 6th ed.
McGraw-Hill: New York.
Forman, B. Fred. 1981. Local Stresses in Pressure Vessels. Pressure
Vessel Handbook Publishing, Inc.: Tulsa.
Hammer, W. 1981. Pressure Hazards in Occupational Safety Management and
Engineering. 2nd ed. Prentice-Hall: New York.
McMaster, R.C. and McIntire, P. (eds.) 1982-1987. Nondestructive
Testing Handbook. 2nd ed., Vols. 1-3. American Society for
Metals/American Society of Nondestructive Testing: Columbus.
Megyesy, E. F. 1986. Pressure Vessel Handbook. 7th ed. Pressure Vessel
Handbook Publishing Inc.: Tulsa.
OSHA Instruction Pub 8-1.5. 1989. Guidelines for Pressure Vessel Safety
Assessment. Occupational Safety and Health Administration: Washington, D.C.
Thielsch, H. 1975. Defects and Failures in Pressure Vessels and Piping.
2nd ed., Chaps. 16 and 17. Reinhold: New York.
Yokell, S. 1986. Understanding the Pressure Vessel Code. Chemical
Engineering 93(9):75-85.
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