Integrity Assessment of Pressure Vessel
Integrity Assessment of Pressure Vessel
Integrity Assessment of Pressure Vessel
FERNANDO VICENTE Maintenance and Reliability Integrity Engineer ABB Service, Argentina
pressure level? Is it safe, or do I have to stop the process to carry out repairs? Structural integrity assessment can be a useful tool for determining the suitability of a vessel for service, and good maintenance management can reduce the inspection cost and extend the equipment life within safety standards. Pressurised equipment, such as a large horizontal vessel in a typical gas plant can experience in-service damage. The vessel condition deteriorates due to various factors mechanical, process-related and corrosion-induced. The integrity assessment methodology includes analyses of tnessfor-service and of remaining useful life, based on non-destructive examination results and operating conditions. This case study describes how structural integrity assessment methodology has been developed for application to a large horizontal NGL vessel, and the analysis procedure, stress analysis and remaining useful life evaluation are discussed. Recommendations for dealing with anomalies detected during assessment are also presented.
METHOD
The methodology applied by ABB Service to an NGL gas plant aimed to maximise the pressure vessel's reliability and availability. The procedure aimed at identifying its mechanical behaviour under different process condition, understanding the potential damage mechanisms and obtaining accurate results from nondestructive inspections. The methodology used in this analysis consisted of ve steps, viz. (A) Creating a qualitative risk matrix and selecting equipment that required a deeper analysis;
Abstract
A methodology for assessing the structural integrity of a large horizontal NGL (Natural Gas Liquid) vessel has been developed. The general analysis procedure, stress analysis and remaining useful life evaluation are described. Recommendations for dealing with anomalies detected during assessment are also presented. The methodology employed can be applied to other, similar, pressurised vessels in the oil and gas, chemical and petrochemical plants.
INTRODUCTION
n the oil and gas industry, pressure vessel integrity is a major concern. After internal and external inspections various anomalies or defects can be reported and repairs could be required in order to restore a pressure vessel to its original condition. The rst question for an engineer, operator or manager is: can we keep operating at this
(B) Carrying out the analysis of equipment (stress analysis, potential damage mechanism, failure modes, process condition and maintenance strategy); (C) Quantication of inspection results; (D) Fitness-for-Service analysis; (E) Failure analysis. Key factors were to complete every step correctly and to respect the sequence A to E (see Figure 1). Step A: Qualitative Risk Ranking In this rst part a qualitative risk analysis of the pressure equipment needed to be performed. This would result in the deletion from the analysis of much equipment due to the low risk presented and some equipment would be considered for other types of analysis. The rule of thumb was that 20% of the equipment would account for 80% of the risk, so the idea was to focus on that vital 20%. In this particular study the qualitative risk presented by equipment was calculated following the standard specication from API 580 and API 581 'Risk Based Inspection' [1,2], where the risk is dened as the product of likelihood and consequence, e.g. Risk = Likelihood x Consequence For this analysis the large pressure vessel had a low chance of suffering a failure, but the consequences (re and explosion) were high, so the risk was medium. Figure 2 shows the qualitative risk of the equipment.
Figure 3
were assessed. To calculate the consequence of a failure category basic safety aspects were reviewed, such as the volume enclosed, the toxicity, risk of re and explosion. In the case discussed here the large horizontal NGL pressure vessel required a deeper analysis. Step B: Assessment Once the risk of equipment had been determined qualitatively a deeper analysis could be required or not, depending on the risk level assessed. A detailed analysis was carried out for this particular pressure vessel. In this part of the procedure three technical aspects were reviewed, i.e. Mechanical behaviour of the large horizontal pressure vessel v(a stress analysis) Potential damage mechanisms Maintenance strategy
was performed. The normal operational pressure, operation temperature, liquid and shell weight were considered for the stress analysis (see Figures 4, 5 & 6 ). Pressure vessel data Material: A516 Gr 70 N Thickness: 70 mm Insulated: Yes Length: 31.000 mm Diameter: 5.000 mm
5 4
3 2 1
The aim here was to identify all critical sections of the equipment: where RISK the maximum stress was High located; what types of stress could be developed during Medium High normal operation. From Medium the structural point of view Low large horizontal pressure vessels (Length/Diameter Medium Risk=Require > 3) are different from analysis of equipment vertical vessels and require NGL Vessel more attention. Zick [3] A B C D E considers a large horizontal pressure vessel as a beam Consequence supported by two-saddle supports resisting the shell Figure 2 Qualitative risk analysis of the large plus liquid weight (creating horizontal vessel a longitudinal bending During the qualitative assessment stress at mid span) and the internal pressure. phase some technical and maintenance There were shear and circumferential stress management aspects were reviewed. To concentrations at the horn of the saddle (see assign the category into which the Figure 3). probability of failure falls the damage To simulate the normal operational mechanism, failure mode, process condition, condition of the large horizontal NGL type of inspection and equipment design pressure vessel a linear nite element analysis
Probability
Figure 5
Figures 5 and 6 indicate that maximum stress (90 Mpa) was located between supports. High stress concentration on the saddle support was found and the hoop stress acting on the shell was 80 Mpa. Based on these results careful attention would be focused on these critical points during internal and external inspection.
Type of damage
Loss Thickness
Damage mechanism
CUI Internal corrosion
Behaviour
General, localized, pitting
Inspection effectivity
Highly effective (90%)
Surface-breaking flaw
Visible deformation
Figure 6
Type of damage
External Loss Thickness
Damage mechanism
CUI Internal corrosion
Behaviour
General, localized, pitting
Inspection effectivity
Fairly effective (50%)
Visible deformation
quantifying each potential damage mechanism (identied in the previous step) via non-destructive testing. Accuracy of the results was a key factor, so qualied and trained personnel are required on site.
Maintenance strategy
Once potential damage mechanisms were identied a maintenance strategy based on in-service and out-of-service (internal) inspection was proposed (see Tables I and II). Step C: Quantifying the inspection results The aim of this step was to determine the actual condition of the equipment,
Figure 7 UT Scan B for pressure vessel. Thickness measured 70.63 mm; there was no loss of material (black side).
The pitting size was determined (pit diameter 2 mm, pit depth 1 mm), and a remaining life and tness-for-service assessment were then required. Step D: Fitness-for-service and remaining life assessment Fitness for service assessment (FFSA) may be dened as the quantitative analysis of the adequacy of a component to perform its function in the presence of a defect. FFSA must include an evaluation of the remaining
Figure 8
Scan B is a technique in which the results are presented on a screen type B, in which the thickness cross-section can be visualised. Using this type of ultrasound technique, performed from inside the equipment, corrosion under insulation (CUI) could be detected without removal of insulation. A corrosion rate of 0.04 mm/year was determined from ultrasonic thickness spot measurements, which also indicated that there was no corrosion under the insulation (see Figure 7 bottom right opposite).
b) Pitting corrosion
CRlong term RL
T T
min
initial
actual
actual
CR
Where
CR = Corrosion Rate RL = Remaining Life Tinitial = initial wall thickness (mm) (The asnew thickness at rst measurement) Tactual = thickness (mm) measured during most recent inspection Tmin = minimum thickness required by pressure or structural load, computed at the design stage
Step 2: Determining the wall thickness used in the assessment using the equations
tc tc
t rq
FCA 69.15 mm
Figure 11 Pitting chart Grade 2. Actual damage state.
70.42 1.27
Step 7: Comparing the photograph of the pit damage area with standard pit charts. Step 8: Determining the RSF from the table accompanying the pit chart and from Rwt RSF = 0.99 Level 1 assessment would be accepted only if 1. Rwt > 0.2 True (see Step 5) 2. RSF > RSFa True (see Steps 8 and 1) For the case concerned the pitting damage was acceptable for the actual operating condition, i.e. the MAWP of 4.4 Mpa. Step E: Root Cause Analysis (RCA) The purpose of RCA is to identify and understand the basic root of problems that affect the equipment performance and its integrity. By understanding how anomalies can originate these failures, or re-occurrence of such problems in similar plant, can be avoided in future. For this reason it is very important, during pressure vessel inspection, to analyse every sign or evidence that can be tested in laboratory. For the analysis reported here a sample of corrosion product was taken from the pressure vessel bottom and subjected to X-Ray diffraction analysis (which explores the sample's crystal structure). Sample results are shown in Table III and Figure 12.
68 67 66 65
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90
Thickness
Years
Figure 10 Wall thickness reduction of large pressure vessel
Step 3: Locating area on the component that has the highest density (number of pits) of pitting damage (using photographs including a reference scale). Step 4: Determining the maximum pit depth
wmx
1 mm
Rwt
tc
FCA wmx tc
Step 6: Determining the Maximum Allowable Working Pressure for the component using the Step 2 thickness
MAWP( Mpa )
2 S tc 2 Rc t c
4.4 Mp
Recommendations
Grinding out the pits to give a smooth surface without going beyond the corrosion allowance was recommended. This would remove local stresses and remove all contamination and traces of the moisture which could allow corrosion if any pitting, or contained deposits, remained.
CONCLUSIONS
A good mechanical integrity programme for pressure vessels is crucial for those plants that need to reduce turnaround time and inspection cost within safety standards. When surveying large horizontal pressure vessels special care should be taken when internal and external inspections are carried out on the shell between the saddle supports. Visual inspection should be undertaken very carefully at the horn of the saddle where the effect of circumferential bending stress may be signicant. In the particular case reported here the tness for service assessment permitted the large NGL pressure vessel to operate at its design performance, i.e. an MAWP of 4.4 Mpa and a Maximum Allowable Operating Pressure (MAOP) of 2.3 Mpa. Even though the degree of pitting corrosion was acceptable, it was suggested that the existing pitting should be removed by grinding. Water trapping in an NGL pressure vessel is unlikely during service. In this case, however, it was shown that bad water specication and inadequate pre-start-up heating had affected the mechanical integrity of the vessel. An MIC corrosion mechanism had been generated due to the vestiges of water remaining after hydro-testing, creating an environment favouring the growth of sulphate reducing bacteria and then the pitting corrosion induced by the metabolism of such bacteria. When the vessel is put back into service there should be no water present and none should be able to enter the system from outside.
Figure 12
The diffraction analysis revealed the presence of corrosion products such as goethite [FeO(OH]) and magnetite (Fe3O4) with sulphur content (S). Both of these can be created by the CO2 and/or H2S that are typically found in NGL. Corrosion by CO2 was discounted however, because FeCO3 was not identied during laboratory analysis. The presence of sulphur in the corrosion deposit was a strong indication of Sulphate Reducing Bacteria (SRB) attack. The presence of sand deposits at the bottom of the pressure vessel had contributed to creating an environment for Microbially Inuenced Corrosion (MIC).
BIBLIOGR APHY
1. 2. API RP580, Risk Based Inspection (1st Ed), Washington DC, May 2002 API 581, Risk Based Inspection, Base Resource Document (1st Ed), Washington DC, May 2000 Zick L P, Stresses in large horizontal pressure vessels on two saddle supports, Welding Journal Research Supplement, Sept 1951 API RP 571, Damage mechanisms affecting xed equipment in the rening industry, Dec 2003 API 510, Pressure vessel inspection code: in-service inspection, rating, repair, and alteration (9th Ed), Washington DC, June 2006 API RP 579, Fitness for service (2nd Ed), Washington DC, March 2006 ASM, Metals Handbook Volume 13, Corrosion, ASM International 1992
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Figure 13 Pitting corrosion under tubercle