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Development of a non-toxic corrosion inhibitor for MEA Plants


Abstract:
A non-toxic corrosion inhibitor based on organic compounds was developed to replace a heavy metal toxic inhibitor in MEA plants. The tasks involved in the development program are presented in this article.
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A non-toxic corrosion inhibitor based on organic compounds was developed to replace a heavy metal toxic inhibitor in MEA plants. The tasks involved in the development program are presented in this hot topics series.

A search for non-toxic organic chemicals with potential inhibitive properties was performed first followed by the preliminary screening tests. The best three chemicals were then tested in stirred autoclave at several concentrations.

Slow strain rate runs were also performed to test the susceptibility of welded as well as non-welded carbon steel specimens to stress corrosion cracking. The single best performing chemical was then tested under turbulent and laminar flow conditions in a flow loop. High alloys materials typically found in amine plants were also tested in an autoclave setting to determine if they were compatible with the inhibitor. The single best performing inhibitor was then finally tested in a refinery gas plant for 18 months.

This article provides an introduction to inhibition in Amine plants and the overall scope of this data development effort. Subsequent articles will describe the data obtained and relevant analytical trends.

Amine plants, using MEA as a sweetening agent, always exhibit some degree of corrosion. The latter is minimized by keeping the amine clean, holding acid gas loading within specifications, operating the still at the lowest temperature possible and maintaining a regular testing program.

Compounds based on inorganic, toxic materials such as arsenic are still used as corrosion inhibitors in many amine plants around the world. However, most manufacturers, especially in the USA, are not producing these chemicals anymore. Due to non-availability of these toxic materials and other environmental and safety problems in their disposal/storage, alternative non-toxic and organic chemicals are needed to solve the corrosion problem.

These articles present the methodology used to develop a non-toxic corrosion inhibitor for replacement of a heavy metal toxic inhibitor in a MEA plant used for CO2 removal. The tasks involved in this program included:

1. The search for candidate compounds.

2. The screening tests on all candidate inhibitors to select the best performing inhibitor compatible and their optimum concentration .

3. The autoclave tests to verify corrosion behavior of the best inhibitor and to test Stainless steel and Monel materials.

4. The slow strain rate tests for evaluation of SCC of steel base metal and welded specimens with and without inhibitor.

5. The dynamic flow loop tests to simulate field flow conditions.

6. The field test.

The process for the search for candidate corrosion inhibitors compounds involved extensive literature, patent, and computer database searches of commercially available chemical agents with potential viability for use as corrosion inhibitor formulations. The search was based on several requirements including solubility, temperature stability, cloud point in amine solvents. Additional requirements were that none of these compounds were based on inorganic, toxic materials such as arsenic. Thirty six (36) corrosion inhibitors based primarily on organic constituents compatible with MEA and meeting all the requirement specified above were selected.


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