Fellow’s Corner

This series of articles is intended to highlight industry-wide engineering experiences, practical opinions and guidance, to provide improved awareness for the wider public, and focussed advice for practicing technologists. The series is prepared by ICorr Fellows who have made significant contributions to the field of corrosion management. This month’s articles include, John Boran on measuring hardness in sour service, and Bob Crundwell on sacrificial anodes.

Think about where you measure hardness for sour service applications – weld root hardness.

Great care must be taken in the control of welding processes, as they may introduce significant metallurgical defects and detrimentally alter material performance in the sometimes ‘adverse’ conditions of Oil and Gas operations.

Hydrogen sulphide in oilfield fluids can cause sulphide stress cracking (SSC) in metals and alloys used in oil and gas production for pipelines, piping, pressure vessels, and other items that may come into contact with the sour fluids. SSC occurs if a material is not sour service rated at design, along with other cracking mechanisms, such as hydrogen induced cracking (HIC), step wise cracking (SWC) and stress-oriented hydrogen induced cracking (SOHIC), but this article will concentrate on SSC aspects.

Oilfield fluids are classified partly on the presence of acid gasses in the fluids. Carbon dioxide (CO2), when dominant, results in so-called sweet fluids where it is the major integrity threat in the presence of moisture. Trace amounts of hydrogen sulphide (H2S) are almost always present but when these exceed safe limits, the fluids are termed sour. Acid corrosion of metals and alloys in sour oilfield fluids result in the production of monatomic hydrogen, the hydrogen sulphide present acts as a catalyst to the hydrogen recombination reaction where diffused monatomic hydrogen recombines to form the diatomic hydrogen molecule.

Monatomic hydrogen can diffuse relatively easily into the metal lattice and embrittle the metallic matrix, subsequently causing cracking that can have catastrophic consequences for the integrity of the pressure containment envelope and result in leaks of the well fluids. The hydrogen molecule cannot diffuse into the metallic matrix to embrittle the metal.

The control and assessment of SSC is described in the International Standards Organisation (ISO) and National Association of Corrosion Engineers (NACE) standard ISO 15156 / MR 0175 – Petroleum and Natural Gas Industries – Materials for use in H2S – containing environments in oil and gas production, parts 1 – 3, henceforth referred to as ISO 15156.

One principal method of controlling SSC in low alloy carbon steels is to control the hardness of the base metal, weld, and heat affected zone (HAZ). It has been established over 45 years ago that carbon steels would not suffer SSC if the steel had a hardness less than 250 hardness Vickers (HV) or 22 hardness Rockwell scale C (HRC). Carbon steel can tolerate any partial pressure of H2S if the steel hardness is sufficiently low and the corrosion rate can be tolerated within the corrosion allowance.

The hardness of a metal is measured and controlled during weld procedure qualification and steel plate production to assure the suitability of the parent material and the weld for service in sour conditions, and ISO 15156 specifies how the hardness should be measured as discussed below.

ISO 15156 specifies a number of configurations for the hardness survey, including for butt welds, fillet welds, weld repairs and weld overlay.

The principal ISO 15156 configurations are for a Vickers hardness survey and a Rockwell hardness survey of a butt weld. The Rockwell test is generally easier to perform but the Vickers test has the advantage of an optical system that enables magnification of the material’s target area that allows the tester to pinpoint microelements on the surface for a more accurate and test.

It is important to note that the line of hardness test locations adjacent to the weld root, which is the region of the metal that faces the sour fluid, is 1.5 mm from the inside surface for Vickers hardness surveys and 3 mm for Rockwell hardness surveys. The tip of the root weld will be even further away from the line of the inside surface hardness survey.

It is well known that when welding, the quenching action of the base metal and any root weld backing such as the copper backing shoes or other conductive metallic materials, may result in more rapid weld root cooling rates, resulting in higher hardness’s in the vicinity of the tip of the weld root due to chilling effects.

In a recent sour service pipeline construction that suffered extensive SSC, hardness values of up to 350 HV were recorded at the tip of the weld root, despite passing the ISO 15156 weld procedure test hardness requirements and values of up to 290 HV on the inside surface of the parent pipe which also suffered SSC. It is clear that the hardness traverses specified in ISO 15516, are not adequate to detect all hardened zones in both weld roots and parent plate.


Figure 1:
Butt weld survey method for Vickers Hardness measurements. From BS EN ISO 15156.


Figure 2:
Butt weld survey method for Rockwell Hardness measurements. From BS EN ISO15156.


Figure 3:
Hardness traverse to extreme tip of weld root.

Sacrificial anodes in the future

The largest consumption of sacrificial anodes is in the protection of energy related structures in seawater.

• Anode Alloys
Zinc was the initial choice for marine protection systems and is now mainly related to shipping applications. Zinc alloys do not perform well at elevated temperatures, loss of driving potential and formation of adherent corrosion products, with some reports of high consumption rates, means that they are not considered at temperatures much above ambient. Zinc anode alloys have the advantage that their current capacity is unaffected by operating current density and are therefore well suited to applications where an anticorrosion coating is present.

Aluminium alloys, based on the addition of 5% of zinc and 0.15% tin give a desirable driving potential but only very low efficiency unless solution heat treated after casting, when better capacity is achieved. Aluminium with 5% zinc, 0.02% indium and 0.2% silicon, is the commonest in general use and has found application at higher temperatures, driving potentials hold up but at the cost of a significant proportion of current capacity. Aluminium anode alloys experience a reduction in current capacity at reduced operating current density, this being significant at very low current density such as may be found with well-coated pipelines.

There are unlikely to be any fundamental advances in anode alloys in the foreseeable future. The use of zinc in offshore applications has been limited by opposition from environmental lobbies leading to banning of their use, and the issue of anode performance at elevated temperatures still has to be resolved. Testing has shown that anode performance is significantly reduced at elevated temperatures, but virtually all that testing has been under isothermal conditions, with little testing under heat transfer conditions, which is much more likely to be the actual service situation.

Future offshore developments are venturing into environments more aggressive than plain seawater. The particular issues surrounding Lake Maracaibo are well documented, less well known are those of the Black Sea, where the seabed is at a great depth and covered with centuries of organic matter. The suitability of existing materials and engineering practices will need to be confirmed and if necessary, adapted to such applications. Seawater having limited access to oxygen replenishment is another design challenge.

• Production of anodes
Most anodes are produced by casting the alloy onto an insert (usually a steel pipe or frame which supports the anode material and facilitates its attachment to the structure to be protected) in a permanent mould usually made of steel. Care must be taken in the casting process to take account of expansion of moulds and inserts, and contraction of anodes. Anode alloys are formulated for their electrochemical properties rather than their structural ones and this has led to problems of cracking of the anode material particularly with aluminium anodes. It is unlikely that production techniques will change significantly.

• Application engineering
The shape of an anode will contribute markedly to its performance in a cathodic protection system.
Fixed production platforms have a life expectancy of 30+ years and are usually only provided with coatings in the tidal areas. Anodes for these applications are generally up to 30cm in section and up to 300cm in length with a trapezoidal or circular cross section. Inserts are now invariably a tube with ends bent to facilitate attachment some 30 cm from the surface to be protected. Inserts are made from steels with a composition compatible with welding direct to the structure or via a doubler plate. A typical production platform may stand in 200 metres or more of water and have 1000 tonnes of anodes providing protection for the life of the structure. Care must be taken in the design to allow for current drain to assorted attachments, including but not limited to, production risers, export pipelines and piling. Failure to make due allowance for such current drain may compromise the protection system life, or in extreme cases prevent protection being achieved at all.

Probably the most interesting application engineering challenge is with anodes for submarine pipelines. These traditionally are segmented or semi cylindrical (half shell) bracelets which are a tight fit to the pipe. A taper may be cast into the leading and trailing edges of the anodes for smaller diameter pipelines. Larger diameter pipes often have a reinforced concrete weight coating several centimetres thick over the anticorrosion coating, and in this case the bracelets are made to a corresponding thickness in order to minimise any ‘step’ in the surface profile causing impact as the pipe passes over the stinger or boom on the lay-barge during laying.

Traditional engineering principles for the cathodic protection of pipelines are therefore a compromise between protection requirements and installation requirements. Future developments are likely to focus on the balance of this compromise in favour of the protection requirements ever recognising that the political, environmental and economic results of getting it wrong are usually disastrous.

• Current density for protection
In almost all cases the cathodic current density to initiate polarisation is substantially greater than that required to maintain it, exceptions being where there is a substantial water velocity past the structure or some other depolarising effect such as frequent storms. Protection system specifications are now recognising this and require an initial polarising current density and (much) lower maintenance current density. This will generate considerable rewards and impact substantially on design philosophy in the future. The selective use of coatings on parts of a fixed structure can lead to reduced anode requirements and greatly assist with the initial polarisation current issue. Any reduction in float-out weight can yield significant cost savings and will be relentlessly pursued although the risks make such progress slow.

The design of protection systems for coated structures requires an estimate of the levels of coating break down over the life of the structure to be made. The CP system is then designed to cater for this. In the future this combination of coatings and cathodic protection will merit increased attention, as even a low-grade coating with a relatively short life would address the initial polarisation current.

Offshore pipelines unlike platforms are almost invariably provided with a very heavy-duty anticorrosion coating, and reinforced concrete weight coatings on top are common. Pipeline coating breakdown levels used in CP design are typically 2.5% over the design life of the line or less. The future may well include superior anticorrosion coatings to those used at present. Cathodic protection designs could therefore have fewer unit anode installations, however distribution of protection along the length of the line will be a serious consideration, and anodes may be installed only at the ends of relatively short lines, or even fewer anodes added after the line has been laid in the case of longer lines.

• Quality control and quality assurance
The importance of effective QC & QA cannot be overstressed. Anode producers use instrumented analytical techniques such as infrared spectrophotometry, spark emission spectroscopy, atomic absorption spectroscopy, and plasma emission spectroscopy, to control alloy chemistry. When undertaken by properly trained technicians with access to traceable standards these methods provide rapid and reliable compositional data.

The use of steels with appropriate certification and welding to coded practices can give suitable assurance in respect of inserts.

The use of electrochemical testing as a quality control procedure has become mandatory on alloys, and a whole industry has grown up around such testing both by producing foundries and independent test houses. The testing procedures now used involve small samples of anode alloy often prepared in such a manner as to remove the entire ‘as cast’ surface. Great store is placed on the absolute values of current capacity per unit weight obtained.

In more than 40 years of practice in the use and manufacture of aluminium alloy sacrificial anodes, the author has never heard of a report of the failure of an anode whose chemical composition was within specified tolerance, to operate as expected. Thousands of electrochemical tests have been undertaken at great expense for no benefit whatsoever. It is to be hoped that the future will see realism and this waste of effort and resource consigned to history.

• System design
The calculation of the weight of anode alloy required to protect a structure is given by a simple calculation using area to be protected, current density, required life, and anode capacity. It is a brave designer that claims to know the true surface area of the structure. Dimensional tolerances of rolled sections of the sizes from which offshore structures are made are known quite accurately but it is surprising what bits get left out of the calculation let alone any correction for surface irregularity. Maintenance current density is variously quoted at figures between 0.140 A/m2 and 0.040 A/m2
for the same location, a factor of almost 4 times.

Anode current capacities for Al-Zn-In alloys are variously quoted between 2550 Ahrs/kg and 2750 Ahrs/kg. In general, the lower figure is on the basis of long term field tests, and the higher figure is on the basis of those short term lab tests mentioned previously.

Future design of sacrificial anode systems should focus on true surface areas and the current density required to polarise them, rather than squeezing the last drop of performance out of the anode alloy, and then justifying it with spurious testing.
Dr Bob Crundwell

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