Some Factors Affecting Initiation of Stress Corrosion Cracking of an X80 Pipe Steel in Near-Neutral pH Environment

Author(s):  
Jidong Kang ◽  
Darren Bibby ◽  
James A. Gianetto ◽  
Mark Gesing ◽  
Muhammad Arafin

Near-neutral pH stress corrosion cracking (NNpHSCC) continues to be a concern for existing high pressure pipelines used to transport oil and gas in Canada. Although several studies have focused on the role of pipe steel microstructure on the initiation and growth of NNpHSCC, most used specimens machined from sub-surface locations that did not preserve the original pipe surface, which is the material that ultimately exposed. In the present work, a series of test specimens were designed to preserve the external pipe surface and allowed shallow 0.05 mm root radius surface notches with depths from 0.1, 0.2 and 0.3 mm to be machined and tested. All specimens were machined in the hoop (transverse) direction from a 1067 mm diameter, 12.5 mm thick X80 pipe. The specimens were subjected to a constant load of 95% of the specified minimum yield strength (SMYS) (equivalent to 80% of the actual pipe hoop yield strength) using proof rings for extended durations, e.g., 110, 220, 440 or 660 days. The results show that there was no apparent SCC developed on the smooth specimens with the original surface even after being tested for up to 660 days. In contrast, SCC were found to have initiated at the machined notches, irrespective of their depth after testing for 220 days. To provide further understanding of specimen design, the same SCC testing conditions were applied to smooth round-bar test specimens machined in the hoop direction of this same pipe close to the external surface and the mid-wall locations. While minor SCC initiation was found in the near surface specimens, significant SCC was observed in the specimens taken from the mid-wall location. This finding suggests that the heterogeneous or variable microstructure through the pipe wall thickness plays a critical role in SCC initiation for the X80 pipe investigated. It also suggests that careful attention must be paid to the design of test specimens as well as the location that they are removed from a test pipe in order to realistically assess the SCC susceptibility of pipe steels.

Author(s):  
Frank Y. Cheng

A thermodynamic model was developed to determine the interactions of hydrogen, stress and anodic dissolution at the crack-tip during near-neutral pH stress corrosion cracking in pipelines. By analyzing the free-energy of the steel in the presence and absence of hydrogen and stress, it is demonstrated that a synergism of hydrogen and stress promotes the cracking of the steel. The enhanced hydrogen concentration in the stressed steel significantly accelerates the crack growth. The quantitative prediction of the crack growth rate in near-neutral pH environment is based on the determination of the effect of hydrogen on the anodic dissolution rate in the absence of stress, the effect of stress on the anodic dissolution rate in the absence of hydrogen, the synergistic effect of hydrogen and stress on the anodic dissolution rate at the crack-tip and the effect of the variation of hydrogen concentration on the anodic dissolution rate.


CORROSION ◽  
1967 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. S. GREEN ◽  
E. G. HANEY

Abstract Stress corrosion cracking of 18Ni maraging steel foil has been studied in deionized water solutions with the pH adjusted by NaOH additions over a range from 8 to 13. The full range of NaCl contents from saturated solutions to no addition was tested with specimens stressed to 75 percent of yield strength. For each variation in NaCl content, the specimen failure times go through a minimum with respect to pH. With increasing NaCl content, the minimum becomes more pronounced and its position shifts towards higher pH values. The position of each minimum is indicated by electrode potential measurements. Potentiostatic measurements as a function of pH confirm that maximum susceptibility to stress corrosion cracking occurs just prior to the onset of passivation.


ScienceRise ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 17-27
Author(s):  
Lyudmila Nyrkova ◽  
Anatoliy Rybakov ◽  
Sergey Mel’nychuk ◽  
Svitlana Osadchuk

RSC Advances ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (59) ◽  
pp. 36876-36885 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bingying Wang ◽  
Yu Yin ◽  
Zhiwei Gao ◽  
Zhenbo Hou ◽  
Wenchun Jiang

A developed surface enhancement technique, USRP, was applied on X80 pipeline steel and the stress corrosion cracking susceptibility was studied.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document