With the recent spate of material failures in the oil and gas industry around the
world, the role of a materialand corrosion engineer in selecting suitable material has become more complex, controversial and
difficult. Further, the task had become more diverse, since now modern
engineering materials offer a wide spectrum of attractive properties
and viable benefits.
From the earlier years or late
"70s. the process of materials
selection that had been confined exclusively
to amaterial engineer, a metallurgist or a corrosion
specialist has widened today to encompass other disciplines like process,
operations, integrity, etc. Material selection is
no more under a single umbrella but has become an integrated iearn effort and a
multidisciplinary approach. The material or
corrosion specialist in today's environment has to play the role of negotiator
or mediator between the conflicting interests of other peer disciplines like
process, operations, concept, finance, budgeting, etc.
With this as backdrop, this article
presents various stages in the material selection process
and offers a rational path for the selection process
toward a distinctive, focused and structured holistic approach.
What is material selection in oil and gas industry? Material selection in the oil and gas industry - by and large - is
the process of short listing technically suitable material options and materials for
an intended application. Further to these options, it is the process of
selecting the most cost- effective material option for
the specified operating life of the asset, bearing in mind the health, safety
and environmental aspects and sustainable development of the asset, technical
integrity and any asset operational constraints envisaged in the operating life
of the asset.
What stages are involved? The stages
involved in the material selection process can be outlined as material selection 1 ) during the concept or basic engineering
stage. 2) during the detailed engineering stage, and 3) for failure prevention
(lessons learned).
Concept Stage
Material selection during the concept stage basically means the
investigative approach for the various available material options for the intended function and application. In
this stage, a key factor for the material selection is
an up-front activity taking into consideration operational flexibility, cost,
availability or sourcing and, finally, the performance of the material for the intended service and application.
The material and
corrosion engineer's specialized expertise or skills become more important as
the application becomes critical, such as highly sour conditions, highly
corrosive and aggressive fluids, high temperatures and highly stressed
environments, etc.
It is imperative at this concept stage
that the material selection process becomes an interdisciplinary team
approach rather an individualistic material and
corrosion engineer's choice. However, some level of material selection must be made in order to proceed with the
detailed design activities or engineering phase.
The number and availability of material options in today's industry have grown tremendously and
have made the selection process more intricate than a few decades back.
The trend with research and development in thematerials sciences
will continue to grow and may make the selection even
more complex and intriguing.
It should be understood that, at the
concept design stage, the selection is broad and wide. This stage defines the options available for specific application with the
available family of materials like metals, non metals, composites, plastics,
etc. If an innovative and cost-effective material choice is
to be made from an available family of options, it is normally done
at this stage.
At times, material constraints from the client or operating company
or the end user may dictate the material selections as
part of a contractual obligation. Sourcing, financial and cost constraints at
times may also limit and obstruct the material selections except
for vey critical applications where the properties and technical acceptability
of the material is more assertive and outweighs the cost of
the material.
Materials availability is another important criterion on
the material selection which impacts the demanding project schedules
for the technically suitable material options.
Also, different engineering disciplines may have different and specific
requirements like constructability. maintainability, etc. However, a compromise
shall be reached at this stage among all the disciplines concerned to arrive at
a viable economic compromise on the candidate material.
Detailed Engineering Stage
Materials selection during the detailed design stage becomes more
focused and specific. The material
selection process narrows down to a small
group or family of materials, say: carbon steels, stainless steels, duplex
stainless steels. Inconels or Incoloys, etc. In the detail design stage, it
narrows down to a singlematerial and other conditions of supply like Austenitic
stainless steels, Martensitic stainless steels, castmaterials, forged materials,
etc.
Depending on the criticality of the
application at this stage the material properties,
manufacturing processes and quality requirements will be addressed to more
precise levels and details. This may sometimes involve extensive material-testing programs for corrosion, high temperature, and
simulated heat treatment as well as proof testing.
From the concept to detailing stage is a
progressive process ranging from larger broad possibilities to screening to a
specific material and supply condition.
At times, the selection activity may involve a totally new project
(greenfield) or an extension of existing project (brownfield). In the case of
an existing project, it could be necessary to check and evaluate the adequacy
of the current materials; it may be necessary at times to select a material with enhanced properties. The candidate material shall normally be investigated for more details
in terms of cost, performance, fabricability, availability and any requirements
of additional testing in the detail engineering stage.
Failure Prevention (Lessons Learned)
Material selection and the sustainability of material to prevent any failure during the life of the
component is the final selection criterion in the process.
Failure is defined as an event where
the material or the component did not accomplish the intended
function or application. In most cases, the material failure
is attributed to the selection of the wrong material for
the particular application. Hence, the review and analysis of the failure is a
very important aspect in the material selection process
to avert any similar failures of the material in
future.
The failure analysis - or the lessons
learned - may not always result in better material.
The analysis may. at times, study and consider the steps to reduce the impact
on the factors that caused the failure. A typical example would be to introduce
a chemical inhibition system into the process to mitigate corrosion of thematerial or to carry out a post-weld heat treatment to
minimize the residual stresses in the material which
has led to stress corrosion cracking failure.
An exhaustive review and study of the
existing material that failed, including inadequacy checks and a
review of quality levels imposed on the failed materials, is required before an alternate and different material is selected for the application.
The importance of the failure analysis cannot
be overstressed in view of the spate of failures in recent times in the oil and
gas industry. The results of failure analysis and study will provide valuable
information to guide thematerial selection process and can serve as input for the recommendation
in the concept and design stages of the project. It strengthens and reinforces
the material selection process with sound back-up information.
Let us take a general view of material recommendations for pipelines. Some of !he materials most
relevant for use in pipelines in the Middle East are indicated for information
and guidance in Table 1. The recommendations are general in nature and
each pipeline is to be studied in detail case by case as
regards operating conditions, fluid compositions, etc. before any final selections.
Also, other considerations - like the
total length of the pipeline, above or below ground installation, natili e oí
the pipeline (export line or processing line, etc.) - are to
be taken into consideration during the detailed engineering phase.
Conclusion
To maintain the integrity of the asset and provide a safe, healthful
working environment it is always a welcome event to have the material selection process
be executed as a holistic team approach rather than an individual metallurgist's
or corrosion specialist's choice.
Sumber : Nalli, Krupavaram. "A Rational Approach to Pipeline Material Selection". 29 Januari 2014. http://search.proquest.com/docview/913590901?accountid=31562
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