Title: Presentation to NACE Middle East
1Presentation to NACE Middle East African Branch
- Corrosion Under Fire Protection
- - Ian Bradley, International Paint Saudi Arabia
Limited (IPSAL)
2Contents
- Types of passive fireproofing (PFP)
- Commonly found corrosion problems
- Corrosion testing for PFP systems
- UL exterior listing
- Norsok
- Comparison
- Guidance for specifying PFP systems in corrosive
environments - Summary
- 20 25 minutes
- Questions Answers session
3Types of passive fire protection
- Dense Concrete
- Lightweight Cementitious
- Solvent based and solvent free Epoxy intumescents
- Subliming materials
- Mineral Wool (and other insulations)
4ISO 12944 C5
- ISO 12944 developed to assist engineers
- Global standard
- Designates environments according corrosivity
- Based upon corrosion of steel lt 120ºC
- C5 - M superseded by ISO 20340
- Addresses corrosion aspect but not fire
performance - A typical plant may encompass several
environments - Jetty
- Areas around cooling water towers etc
5Some examples of corrosion beneath passive fire
protection
6Examples of corrosion behind PFP
7Corrosion cycle
8Loss of passivation effect
- Acidic industrial atmosphere
- Decrease in pH
- Leads to loss of passivity
- Active corrosion beneath cementitious materials
9Examples of corrosion behind PFP
Corrosion beneath concrete fireproofing C5I
environment (Southern Europe)
Note significant thinning of section flange
10Examples of corrosion behind PFP
Pitting corrosion behind lightweight cementitious
fireproofing C5I Pitting corrosion caused by
ingress of calcium chloride during maintenance on
vessel LPG drier in refinery
11Examples of corrosion behind PFP
General corrosion behind delaminated fireproofing
material C5 - M Structural steel offshore
12Examples of corrosion behind PFP
Delamination of topcoat and subsequent
deteoriation of passive fire protection material
C5-M Structural steel offshore
13Examples of corrosion behind PFP
Severe corrosion of structural I sections beneath
fireproofing Chemical Plant USA (C5-I)
14Examples of corrosion behind PFP
Gas pipe-work support structure Structural steel
onshore C4 / C5-I
15Examples of corrosion behind PFP
Process vessel and structural steel
offshore Structural steel offshore C5 -M
16Examples of corrosion behind PFP
LPG Sphere Leg Structural steel onshore C5 - M
17Some contributing factors
- No coating or inadequate coating beneath
- Testing of fire monitors containing water or
worse seawater - Lack of flashing plates / sealing caps
- No stand off
- But no bond to surface either
- Non destructive NDT difficult / impossible
18When specifying fire protection materials
- What do engineers concentrate on?
- Fire performance
- Fire duration
- Critical core temperature
- Type of fire (hydrocarbon, cellulosic, jet fire)
- Cost (Fire protection is a major cost item on new
plant) - Still too little emphasis on durability and
weatherability
For fire protection to be effective it must be
present and intact at the time of the fire
19How do we define intact?
- Many ways you could define intact
- Unaltered from as built condition
- Free from significant amounts of water
- Bonded to the substrate
- Whole (i.e. free from cracks, corrosion paths
etc) - But we need something subjective!!
- i.e. test standard
- High impact if wrong decision is made
20Early attempts to measure weathering
- DiBt
- German standard for fireproofing
- Requires non-accelerated weathering samples
- Fire tested at regular periods
- Cellulosic fire protection (buildings)
- Long time periods involved
- GASAFE
- LPG fire protection program
- 1990s
- Tried to address weathering aspect
- Limited success
21More Recent Attempts
- UL1709
- UL 1709 addresses fire performance
- Exterior listing addresses weathering
- Accelerated weathering
- Will then list complete system
- Follow up service compliance with as tested
material - NORSOK
- Numerous revisions (covered later)
- Designed for offshore (C5-M)
- Accelerated weathering
- Generic type based
- Two categories
22UL 1709 Exterior Listing
Test Standard Comments
Aging Circulating oven 70ºC for 170 days
Humidity - 97-100 humidity, 180 days
Industrial atmosphere - 1 SO2 / 1 CO2 in chamber water. 95F for 30 days
Salt spray ASTM B117 90 days salt fog testing
Wet Freeze Dry Cycling - 0.05 mm/ s water for 72 hours,-40ºC for 24 hours,60ºC for 24 hours repeated for 12 cycles
Fire testing UL 1709 Must meet original acceptance criteria
23Norsok M501 Revision 5
Test Standard Comments
Ageing resistance ISO 20340 See below
Salt Spray ASTM B117 Artificial seawater, 35ºC, 72 hours
Low temperature -20ºC 24 hours
UVA/Condensation ASTM G53 UVA exposure followed by 100 condensation
Adhesion ISO 4624 Adhesion lt 50 reduction from, gt original gt 3MPa
Scribe Creep - lt 3mm
24Norsok M501 Revision 5 - continued
Test Standard Comments
Blistering, rusting cracking, ISO 4628 Rating 0 for all
Water absorption - Shall be reported
Fire testing - Fire testing to 400ºC critical core temperature for 60 minutes within 10 or original unexposed test
25Norsok M-501 Revision 5 versus Revision 4
- Salt spray and freeze/dry is now a combined cycle
- Revision 4
- Salt spray/drying (ISO 7253) UV-A (G-53) 4200
hours - Water / freezing / drying / humidity ISO 2812-2
4200 hours - Evaluation of scribe creep has changed
- Tested without top-coats
26Corrosion Issues with major generic types
- Dense concrete
- Prone to damage
- No bond to substrate (undercutting)
- Can retain significant amounts of water
(spalling) - Passivation lost with time in marine / industrial
environments - Needs weather cap / sealing
- Lightweight cementitious
- Prone to damage
- No bond to substrate (undercutting)
- Application must be correct
- Similar to dense concrete
- Needs Weather cap / sealing
27Corrosion Issues with major generic types
- Mineral Fibre / Cladding
- Prone to damage
- Very absorbent once cladding damaged
- Salts in mineral wool may contribute
- Needs weather cap / sealing
- Epoxy
- Offer many performance advantages, however,
- Generally fire performance / weatherability is a
balance - Number of materials where balance is incorrect
- More sensitive to application
- Careful (and detailed) specification is necessary
28Some general trends
- Cement based and mineral fibre systems no longer
used in C5-M - Cannot exclude problems in C5-I
- More awareness of extent of C5-M environment
- Jetties
- Coastal Refineries other locations
- Awareness of these corrosion issues
- Not translated into action in many parts of
industry - Corrosivity of project location remains
un-established (Quantitatively)
29Guidance for specifying PFP performance
- Be aware of the problem
- Know your environment
- Question existing practises
- Materials
- Construction details
- Consider key areas and potential for upgrade
- Consider suitable weatherability criteria
- UL / Norsok
- In conjunction with fire performance
- These are safety critical decisions
30Demonstrated performance by case history
- Applied in 1976
- Inspected and analysed
- BAM - 1992
- No chemical changes in material detected
- Intumescent chemicals unaffected
- C5-M Refinery (The Netherlands)
31Conclusions
- Corrosion behind some types of passive fire
protection is a real risk - Durability is as important as initial fire
performance - Test procedures exist which can distinguish
materials performance - Recognised and workable standards
- Available to use
32Questions
Ian.Bradley_at_AkzoNobel.com