Erosion-Corrosion in Pipework: Mechanisms, Material Selection, and Protection
Erosion-corrosion is a synergistic degradation process in which fluid flow and electrochemical corrosion interact to produce wall-loss rates that can exceed the sum of either mechanism acting alone. In industrial pipework — power plant feedwater lines, oil and gas flowlines, chemical plant headers, and slurry transport systems — erosion-corrosion is a leading cause of unplanned shutdowns and, in severe cases, catastrophic pipe rupture. This article provides a graduate-level examination of the underlying mechanisms, the special case of flow-accelerated corrosion (FAC) in water–steam systems, material selection strategies, and engineering protection methods.
Key Takeaways
- Erosion-corrosion wall loss = pure erosion + pure corrosion + synergy term; the synergy component can account for 30–70% of total material loss.
- Flow-accelerated corrosion (FAC) of carbon steel peaks at approximately 130–150°C and is dramatically reduced by >0.1 wt% chromium in the steel or by raising feedwater pH above 9.3.
- The 1986 Surry nuclear plant pipe rupture, caused by FAC, killed four workers and drove the development of systematic FAC inspection programmes across the nuclear and fossil power industries.
- Highest-risk locations are pipe bends, tee junctions, reducers, and components immediately downstream of flow restrictions where boundary-layer disruption is greatest.
- Ultrasonic thickness (UT) grid scanning is the primary inspection method; EPRI CHECWORKS software provides risk-based prioritisation for power plant FAC programmes.
- Upgrading from carbon steel to 1.25Cr–0.5Mo (P11) or 2.25Cr–1Mo (P22) reduces single-phase FAC rates by a factor of approximately 10–25.
Defining Erosion-Corrosion and Its Subtypes
The term erosion-corrosion encompasses several related but mechanistically distinct degradation modes, all sharing the common feature that fluid motion and electrochemical corrosion act together. Fontana and Greene’s classification of the eight forms of corrosion places erosion-corrosion in its own category (Form 7), reflecting its industrial importance and its distinction from the other seven forms (uniform, galvanic, crevice, pitting, intergranular, selective, and stress corrosion cracking). The main subtypes of practical importance are:
- Single-phase erosion-corrosion: Clean liquid flow (no solid particles) in which high velocity or turbulence disrupts the protective oxide film, accelerating anodic dissolution. The dominant mechanism in carbon steel power plant feedwater systems.
- Slurry erosion-corrosion: Solid particles entrained in a liquid carrier abrade the surface and simultaneously disrupt the passive or pseudo-passive film, coupling mechanical cutting/ploughing with accelerated corrosion. Common in mining, mineral processing, dredging, and desalination.
- Gas-borne particle impingement: High-velocity gas streams carrying solid particles or liquid droplets. Important in flue gas ductwork, steam turbine erosion, and pneumatic conveying systems.
- Cavitation erosion-corrosion: Vapour bubble collapse near the metal surface generates intense pressure pulses that remove surface layers; corrosion acts synergistically. Dominant at pump impellers, propeller blades, and throttling valve seats.
- Flow-accelerated corrosion (FAC): A specific, well-characterised form of single-phase erosion-corrosion in carbon steel water–steam systems, driven by mass-transfer-limited dissolution of the magnetite (Fe3O4) film. Warrants its own detailed treatment (see section below).
The Synergy Mechanism: Why Combined Damage Exceeds the Sum of Its Parts
The Synergy Equation
The total material loss rate T in a combined erosion-corrosion environment is not simply the algebraic sum of rates measured independently. The formal decomposition, first systematised by Stack et al. and later adopted in ASTM G119, is:
T = E₀ + C₀ + S where: T = total material loss rate (mg/cm²/h or mm/year) E₀ = pure erosion rate measured in corrosion-inhibited environment C₀ = pure corrosion rate measured in low-velocity (no erosion) environment S = synergy term = ΔEc + ΔCe ΔEc = increase in erosion rate due to corrosion (corrosion-enhanced erosion) ΔCe = increase in corrosion rate due to erosion (erosion-enhanced corrosion)
In practical engineering systems, the synergy term S frequently dominates. For high-velocity slurry pipelines, S can account for 50–75% of total wall loss. For FAC in carbon steel feedwater lines, the “mechanical erosion” component is almost negligible and S approaches T – C₀, meaning the entire excess wall-loss above stagnant corrosion is attributable to the flow-dissolution coupling.
Mechanisms of Corrosion-Enhanced Erosion (ΔEc)
Corrosion weakens the surface through several metallurgical mechanisms that increase its susceptibility to mechanical material removal:
- Selective dissolution of grain boundaries or second phases creates a mechanically weakened, friable surface layer that is more easily detached by the flowing fluid.
- Oxide film cracking under cyclic stress: Brittle corrosion products (magnetite, chromia, alumina) grow as adherent films but may crack under repeated impact from particles, exposing fresh metal and accelerating further film growth and spallation in a cyclic process.
- Hydrogen embrittlement of near-surface layers in acid environments can reduce the ductility of the surface, making it more susceptible to brittle fracture by particle impacts.
Mechanisms of Erosion-Enhanced Corrosion (ΔCe)
Mechanical erosion increases the rate of corrosion through three principal pathways:
- Passive film removal: The protective oxide or passive film (magnetite on carbon steel, chromia on stainless steel, alumina on aluminium alloys) is mechanically stripped by particle impacts or high-shear flow. Film re-formation kinetics are finite, so the metal is transiently exposed as bare active metal at a much higher corrosion rate than the protected passive state. This “depassivation-repassivation” cycling dominates the ΔCe term in passive alloy systems.
- Surface roughness increase: Erosion creates pits, craters, and asperities that increase the true surface area, reduce the local boundary-layer thickness, and create turbulent micro-mixing that accelerates mass transfer of corrosive species to the surface.
- Residual stress introduction: Plastic deformation by particle impacts introduces compressive residual stress in the near-surface layer, but at grain boundaries and inclusions this may locally create tensile stress and microcracks, providing preferential corrosion initiation sites. This is particularly significant in pitting corrosion susceptible alloys.
Flow-Accelerated Corrosion (FAC) in Water–Steam Systems
The FAC Mechanism in Carbon Steel
Flow-accelerated corrosion is the continuous dissolution of the magnetite (Fe3O4) protective film from the bore of carbon steel pipe by the flowing water or wet steam. Under stagnant or low-velocity conditions, carbon steel in deoxygenated hot water develops a protective, adherent magnetite layer through the Schikorr reaction:
3 Fe(OH)₂ → Fe₃O₄ + H₂ + 2 H₂O
This magnetite film, typically 10–100 μm thick, provides a diffusion barrier between the bulk water and the steel surface, limiting further corrosion. Under flowing conditions, the outer magnetite layer dissolves into the flowing fluid as ferrous ions (Fe2+) or iron-hydroxy complexes at a rate governed by mass transfer through the hydrodynamic boundary layer. The dissolution rate depends on the solubility of magnetite at the prevailing temperature and chemistry, and on the mass-transfer coefficient, which in turn depends on flow velocity, turbulence intensity, and pipe geometry. The result is a steady-state wall-loss rate that can reach 1–3 mm/year at pipe bends in susceptible systems.
Temperature Dependence of FAC
The FAC rate–temperature relationship has a pronounced peak because two competing temperature dependencies interact: magnetite solubility in water increases with temperature up to approximately 130–150°C, then decreases (retrograde solubility); and the mass-transfer coefficient increases with temperature because of reduced fluid viscosity. The net result is a peak FAC rate at approximately 130–150°C for single-phase liquid water. For two-phase (steam–water mixture) flow, the peak shifts to lower temperatures (around 100°C) and FAC rates are typically higher than in single-phase flow at the same temperature because phase change disrupts the film continuously.
Effect of Chromium on FAC Rate
Chromium substitutes into the spinel lattice of magnetite, forming a chromium-iron spinel (CrxFe3–xO4) that is significantly less soluble in hot water than pure magnetite. Even small additions of chromium reduce the FAC rate dramatically:
| Steel Grade | Cr Content (wt%) | Relative FAC Rate | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| A106 Grade B / P265GH | 0.0–0.05 | 1.0 (reference) | General carbon steel pipe |
| A335 P1 / 13CrMo4-5 | 0.05–0.15 | 0.6–0.8 | Low-alloy boiler tubing |
| A335 P11 / 1.7335 | 1.0–1.5 | 0.05–0.10 | Feedwater heater shells, high-temperature lines |
| A335 P22 / 10CrMo9-10 | 2.0–2.5 | 0.03–0.07 | High-pressure/temperature steam lines |
| A335 P91 / X10CrMoVNb9-1 | 8.0–9.5 | <0.01 | Main steam, hot reheat |
| 316L stainless steel | 16–18 | ≈0 | Chemically aggressive systems |
FAC rate relative to plain carbon steel (A106 Gr.B) at 150°C in deoxygenated water at pH 9.2. Data from EPRI TR-106611 and BWRVIP-130. © metallurgyzone.com
Effect of Feedwater Chemistry on FAC
Two chemical parameters — pH and dissolved oxygen (DO) — are the primary chemistry levers for FAC control in power plant systems:
pH
Raising pH above 9.0 reduces magnetite solubility and promotes a denser, more adherent film. The EPRI recommendation for all-ferrous feedwater systems (no copper alloys) is AVT(R) at pH 9.3–9.6. For mixed-metallurgy cycles (copper alloys present in condensers or feedwater heaters), pH must not exceed 9.3 to avoid copper dissolution and re-deposition on steam turbine blading. This constraint illustrates the design trade-off between FAC resistance and turbine protection in legacy power plants with mixed-metallurgy systems.
Dissolved Oxygen
Even trace dissolved oxygen (DO > 10 ppb) shifts the electrochemical potential of the steel surface into the passive range where a mixed iron oxide–oxyhydroxide film forms that is more resistant to FAC than pure magnetite. Some modern all-ferrous plants operate under Oxygenated Treatment (OT) at DO = 30–150 ppb, which essentially eliminates FAC while accepting a small increase in general corrosion of the carbon steel. OT requires scrupulous exclusion of copper alloys from the water–steam circuit.
The Surry Accident and the Birth of FAC Management
On 9 December 1986, a 45 cm (18-inch) diameter carbon steel feedwater pipe at the Surry Unit 2 nuclear power plant in Virginia, USA ruptured catastrophically during normal operation. The rupture occurred at an elbow in a turbine-building feedwater line — a location outside the radiologically controlled area and therefore not subject to the radiation-environment inspection procedures that existed at the time. The pipe wall at the failure location had been thinned from its nominal 25 mm to approximately 1.5 mm by FAC over approximately 14 years of service. The pressurised high-temperature water flashed to steam on release and four workers were fatally scalded.
The Surry accident was not an isolated incident. Similar FAC-related failures have occurred at Mihama Unit 3 (Japan, 2004, five fatalities) and at numerous fossil power plants and chemical plants worldwide. The common factor is carbon steel pipework in the 100–200°C temperature range with no systematic wall-thickness monitoring programme.
Impingement Attack and Slurry Erosion-Corrosion
Impingement Attack
Impingement attack is the localised erosion-corrosion that occurs when a high-velocity fluid jet or flow stream strikes a surface at an angle. It is common at pipe-end impingement against vessel walls, at condensate impingement on steam line walls from water slugs, and at heat exchanger tube-sheet faces. The damage morphology is characteristic: horseshoe-shaped, directional pits or a smooth, polished crater with sharp upstream edges, indicating the flow direction. The local shear stress and mass-transfer coefficient at the impingement point are much higher than in straight pipe flow, accelerating both the mechanical and electrochemical components.
Slurry Erosion-Corrosion in Mining and Processing
In slurry transport systems — hydrotransport pipelines for oil sands tailings, mineral concentrates, fly ash, and phosphate slurries — the erosion component is dominated by the kinetic energy of solid particles impacting the pipe bore. The key physical variables are particle size, hardness, shape (angular particles are far more damaging than rounded ones), concentration (vol%), and slurry velocity. The erosion rate at a surface scales approximately as:
E₀ ∝ C × Vⁿ × f(θ)
where:
C = particle concentration (vol fraction)
V = impact velocity (m/s)
n = velocity exponent (typically 2.0–3.0 for ductile metals,
2.5–4.0 for brittle materials)
f(θ) = angular function:
Ductile metals — maximum erosion at 15–30° impact angle
Brittle ceramics — maximum erosion at 90° impact angle
The velocity exponent n ≈ 2.5–3.0 for steels means that doubling the slurry velocity increases the mechanical erosion contribution by a factor of approximately 6–8. Velocity control is therefore the most powerful lever for reducing slurry erosion-corrosion in pumped pipeline systems, though it must be balanced against the minimum transport velocity required to maintain suspension (the deposition-critical velocity for dense slurries).
Cavitation Erosion
Cavitation occurs when the local static pressure in a flowing liquid falls below the vapour pressure, forming vapour bubbles. When these bubbles are carried into a region of higher pressure (downstream of the low-pressure zone), they collapse violently. Bubble collapse is asymmetric near a solid surface, generating a high-velocity micro-jet that can produce localised pressures exceeding 1 GPa. Repeated micro-jet impacts cause fatigue pitting, surface work-hardening, and eventual material removal. Corrosion accelerates cavitation damage by: removing the work-hardened surface layer between impact events, and by creating chemical pits that act as cavitation nucleation sites. The morphology of cavitation damage — a deeply pitted, rough, cratered surface without directional grooves — distinguishes it from abrasive slurry erosion.
Material Selection Against Erosion-Corrosion
General Selection Principles
Material selection must be tailored to the dominant degradation mechanism. There is no single “best” material: a steel that excels against abrasive slurry erosion (hard martensitic grade) may perform poorly against pure corrosion, while an austenitic stainless steel with excellent corrosion resistance may suffer severe erosion damage at high particle velocities because its low hardness and high ductility (promoting a plastically deformed surface with high erosion rates) work against it in high-velocity solid-particle environments.
| Material Class | FAC Resistance | Slurry Erosion Resistance | Corrosion Resistance | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carbon steel (A106) | Poor | Moderate | Poor (uncoated) | General service where pH/T controlled |
| 1.25Cr–0.5Mo (P11) | Good | Moderate | Moderate | Power plant feedwater upgrades |
| 2.25Cr–1Mo (P22) | Very Good | Moderate | Moderate | High-temperature feedwater, boiler headers |
| Martensitic stainless (410, 420) | Excellent | Good (high hardness) | Moderate–Good | Slurry pumps, choke valves, wear rings |
| Duplex SS (2205, 2507) | Excellent | Good | Excellent | Offshore flowlines, chemical plant headers |
| Austenitic SS (316L) | Excellent | Moderate (soft) | Excellent | Chemical plant, low-particle environments |
| Ni-Cr-Mo alloys (C-276) | Excellent | Moderate | Outstanding | Highly corrosive slurries, acid service |
| High-Cr white cast iron | N/A (brittle) | Outstanding | Moderate | Slurry pump casings, cyclone liners |
| Rubber-lined steel | Excellent | Good (elastic) | Excellent | Tailings pipelines, dredge lines |
| Ceramic-lined steel | Excellent | Outstanding | Excellent | High-abrasion slurry, fly ash transport |
Qualitative ratings based on engineering performance data. “FAC resistance” specifically refers to single-phase water–steam FAC. Duplex stainless steel ratings from ASTM A790 and ISO 15590-1 data. © metallurgyzone.com
Duplex Stainless Steel in Erosion-Corrosion Service
Duplex stainless steels (approximately 50% ferrite / 50% austenite microstructure) offer a favourable combination of properties for erosion-corrosion resistance. The chromium content (22–25 wt%), nitrogen, and molybdenum provide excellent passive film stability against corrosion in chloride-bearing and moderately acidic media. The dual-phase microstructure gives yield strengths approximately twice that of 316L, which translates directly into greater resistance to abrasive particle penetration (for surfaces experiencing plastic deformation-dominated erosion). The connection between duplex microstructure and properties is analysed in depth in relation to corrosion mechanisms and pitting corrosion susceptibility.
Surface Engineering and Lining Solutions
Where base metal upgrades are cost-prohibitive, surface engineering provides targeted erosion-corrosion resistance:
- Hard-facing overlays (e.g., Stellite 6, tungsten carbide composites applied by PTAW or HVOF) on valve trim, choke beans, and pump impellers reduce erosion at high-velocity impingement points.
- Rubber linings (natural rubber, neoprene, polyurethane) absorb particle impact energy elastically, dramatically reducing erosion rates. Rubber outperforms metals in many sand-slurry systems because its high resilience means particles rebound rather than cutting the surface. Rubber is limited to temperatures below approximately 80°C and is incompatible with hydrocarbon solvents.
- Ceramic linings (alumina, silicon carbide, zirconia tiles) provide the highest erosion resistance achievable, with wear rates 10–100 times lower than carbon steel in high-velocity abrasive slurry. Their brittleness requires careful impact design and proper anchorage.
- Epoxy and polymer coatings provide corrosion protection but limited erosion resistance; they are appropriate for low-velocity, low-particle-concentration service.
- Thermal spray coatings (HVOF carbide, arc-sprayed stainless, plasma-sprayed ceramics) are described in the arc spraying and wire flame spraying article.
Inspection, Monitoring, and Management
Ultrasonic Thickness Inspection
Ultrasonic wall-thickness (UT) measurement from the outside surface is the primary method for detecting and monitoring erosion-corrosion thinning. Modern phased-array ultrasonic testing (PAUT) and time-of-flight diffraction (TOFD) instruments can rapidly generate C-scan thickness maps of entire pipe spools. The inspection strategy at each location is informed by a susceptibility assessment: high-susceptibility locations (bends, tees, reducers at temperatures 100–200°C in carbon steel systems) warrant baseline inspection at commissioning, then follow-up inspections on a risk-informed schedule. Pulsed eddy current (PEC) testing allows thickness measurement through insulation without its removal — a major practical advantage for insulated high-energy pipework. The inspection approach is aligned with the broader NDT framework described in the context of materials testing methods.
EPRI CHECWORKS FAC Management
EPRI CHECWORKS (CHECking Water Chemistry and Operating parameters for Wall-loss Estimation and Risk for Synergistic effects) is the industry-standard software tool for FAC programme management in nuclear and fossil power plants. It uses a mechanistic model to predict FAC rates at every susceptible component in the system as a function of geometry, local flow conditions, temperature, pH, chromium content, and dissolved oxygen. The software prioritises components for inspection, tracks measured wall-thickness trends, and calculates the remaining life (time to minimum acceptable wall thickness). Inspection resources are allocated using a graded approach: components with highest predicted rates and thinnest walls receive the most frequent inspection.
Fitness-for-Service Assessment
When inspection reveals wall thinning below the nominal design thickness, a fitness-for-service (FFS) assessment determines whether the component can continue in service until the next planned outage. The pressure-retaining capability of a locally thinned pipe is evaluated using the methods in API 579-1 / ASME FFS-1, which provide metal-loss assessment procedures (Part 4 for general thinning, Part 5 for localised thinning). The minimum required wall thickness for a given pressure class is:
tmin = (P × D₀) / (2 × (S×E + P×y)) where: P = internal design pressure (MPa) D₀ = outside diameter (mm) S = allowable stress at design temperature (MPa) E = weld joint efficiency factor y = temperature coefficient (0.4 for ferritic steel <480°C) Remaining life = (tactual − tmin) / FAC rate (mm/year)
Industrial Case Studies
Case Study 1: FAC in Nuclear Plant Feedwater System (Post-Surry)
Following the Surry accident, a European pressurised water reactor (PWR) implemented a comprehensive FAC inspection programme using CHECWORKS modelling. CHECWORKS predicted three high-priority elbows in feedwater heater drain lines at 160°C. UT inspection of the predicted locations revealed thinning from 8.0 mm nominal to 5.2 mm at one elbow — already below the minimum required thickness of 5.5 mm for the operating pressure. The component was replaced during a planned outage with P11 (1.25Cr) material, eliminating the FAC susceptibility at that location. Monitoring of adjacent carbon steel lines led to a phased replacement programme over the next three outage cycles. This case illustrates the importance of predictive modelling: inspection without a prioritisation model would likely have missed this critical elbow among hundreds of low-risk straight-run sections.
Case Study 2: Slurry Erosion-Corrosion in Phosphate Mine Pipeline
A 200 mm diameter carbon steel slurry pipeline transporting phosphate ore concentrate at 3.5 m/s (pH 6.8) experienced wall-loss rates of 2.8 mm/year at 45° bends, requiring bend replacement every 14–18 months. Failure analysis (SEM of worn surfaces, ASTM G119 synergy testing) showed that the synergy component accounted for 62% of total loss. Material trials using rubber-lined steel bends (natural rubber, 12 mm thick) reduced the bend replacement interval from 18 months to over 5 years at the same velocity, with residual wear concentrated in the lining rather than the steel shell. The capital cost payback period for rubber-lined bends was calculated as 11 months. This case demonstrates that for slurry service, surface engineering of high-wear components is often more cost-effective than full material upgrades to the entire pipeline.
Case Study 3: Impingement Attack in Offshore Choke Valve
A subsea production choke valve handling a wet gas–sand mixture (2–5% sand by weight, 80 m/s gas velocity) experienced catastrophic erosion of the cage trim within 3–4 months of service in carbon steel construction. Upgrading to tungsten carbide (WC-Co) hard-facing on the trim seats extended service life to over 24 months. Further improvement was achieved by fluid dynamic modelling (CFD) of the flow path, which identified a secondary impingement zone downstream of the cage that was addressed by geometry modification, reducing the maximum sand impact velocity at that location by approximately 40%.
Connection to the Eight Forms of Corrosion
Erosion-corrosion does not exist in isolation from the other seven forms of corrosion in Fontana’s classification. In practice, it frequently interacts with or accelerates other mechanisms. Erosion-corrosion can initiate pitting corrosion by locally stripping the passive film and creating surface defects that act as pit initiation sites. The disruption of the protective film at pipe bends where flow turbulence is highest can accelerate the local corrosion rate in a manner that parallels galvanic corrosion — the actively corroding film-stripped zone acts as an anode against the passivated straight-pipe sections. In sour hydrocarbon service, the hydrogen produced by corrosion at erosion sites can diffuse into the steel and contribute to hydrogen-induced cracking downstream of the erosion zone.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is erosion-corrosion and how does it differ from pure erosion or pure corrosion?
What is flow-accelerated corrosion (FAC) and what materials are most susceptible?
Where in a piping system does erosion-corrosion damage most commonly occur?
What are the main variables controlling FAC rate in carbon steel power plant piping?
How is the synergy factor S quantified in erosion-corrosion?
What is the Surry accident and why is it significant for erosion-corrosion engineering?
What inspection methods are used to detect and monitor erosion-corrosion wall thinning?
Which material changes most effectively reduce erosion-corrosion susceptibility in piping?
What is the difference between erosion-corrosion and cavitation erosion?
Recommended References
Corrosion Engineering — Fontana (3rd Ed.)
The definitive textbook on the eight forms of corrosion, including a comprehensive treatment of erosion-corrosion, impingement attack, and cavitation. Essential reference for every corrosion engineer.
View on AmazonEPRI FAC Management Handbook — Flow-Accelerated Corrosion
The EPRI technical report series on FAC in nuclear and fossil power plant piping, including CHECWORKS methodology, inspection guidance, and chemistry control recommendations.
View on AmazonASM Handbook Vol. 13B — Corrosion: Materials
Covers corrosion behaviour of all engineering material classes including stainless steels, nickel alloys, and duplex grades in erosion-corrosion environments. Essential for material selection decisions.
View on AmazonSlurry Systems Handbook — Abulnaga
Comprehensive coverage of slurry pipeline design, material selection for erosion-corrosion service, pump selection, and operational troubleshooting for mining and process industry applications.
View on AmazonDisclosure: MetallurgyZone participates in the Amazon Associates programme. If you purchase through these links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support free technical content on this site.
Further Reading
Corrosion Mechanisms
Electrochemical fundamentals of corrosion: anodic dissolution, passivity, Pourbaix diagrams, and kinetics of all major corrosion forms.
Pitting Corrosion
Mechanisms, pitting potential, passive film breakdown, and material selection for pitting resistance in chloride environments.
Hydrogen Induced Cracking
Hydrogen embrittlement and SSC mechanisms relevant to sour service pipework subject to concurrent erosion-corrosion.
Microbiologically Influenced Corrosion
MIC mechanisms, detection, and control in pipelines and marine structures — often co-located with FAC-susceptible carbon steel systems.
Arc Spraying and Thermal Spray Coatings
Wire arc spray and HVOF coatings for erosion and corrosion protection, including stainless and carbide overlays for pipework.
Hardness Testing Methods
Hardness measurement fundamentals including application to post-erosion wear surface characterisation and material selection validation.
HAZ Microstructure
Weld HAZ properties in carbon and low-alloy steels relevant to material upgrades (P11/P22) in FAC-susceptible pipework.
Calculators Hub
Corrosion rate, pipe wall thickness, and other engineering calculators for materials and process engineers.