Corrosion of stainless steel components in seawater reverse osmosis desalination plants-investigations on adapted internal cathodic protection

Type Article
Date 2015-08
Language English
Author(s) Larche Nicolas1, Dezerville Philippe2, Le Flour Denise3, Vinzio Pascal4, Kofler Karl-Heinz4, Thierry Dominique1
Affiliation(s) 1 : Inst Corros, Marine Corros & Cathod Protect, Brest, France.
2 : Veolia Eau, Direct Tech & Performance, St Maurice, France.
3 : IFREMER, Lab Comportement Struct Mer, Plouzane, France.
4 : KSB SAS, Gradignan, France.
Meeting Conference on Desalination for the Environment - Clean Water and Energy, Limasol, CYPRUS, MAY 11-15, 2014
Source Desalination And Water Treatment (1944-3994) (Taylor & Francis Inc), 2015-08 , Vol. 55 , N. 9 , P. 2478-2490
DOI 10.1080/19443994.2014.939499
WOS© Times Cited 1
Keyword(s) Corrosion, Seawater reverse osmosis, Stainless steels, Cathodic protection
Abstract Stainless steel is widely used in seawater reverse osmosis units (SWRO) for both good mechanical and corrosion resistance properties. However, many corrosion failures of stainless steel in SWRO desalination units have been reported. These failures may often be attributed to un-adapted stainless steel grade selection and/or to the particular aggressive seawater conditions in "warm" regions (high ambient temperature, severe biofouling, etc.). Cathodic protection (CP) is a well-known efficient system to prevent corrosion of metallic materials in seawater. It is successfully used in the oil and gas industry to protect carbon steel structures exposed in open-sea. However, the specific service conditions of SWRO units may seriously affect the efficiency of such anti-corrosion system (high flow rates, large stainless steel surfaces affected by biofouling, confinement limiting protective cathodic current flow, etc.). Hence, CP in SWRO units should be considered with special care and modeling appears as useful tool to assess an appropriate CP design. However, there is a clear lack of CP data that could be transposed to SWRO service conditions (i.e. stainless steel, effect of biofouling, high flow rate, etc.). From this background a Join Industry Program was initiated including laboratory exposures, field measurements in a full scale SWRO desalination plant, and modeling work using PROCOR software. The present paper reviews the main parameters affecting corrosion of stainless steel alloys in seawater reverse osmosis units. CP on specific stainless steel devices was investigated in order to assess its actual efficiency for SWRO units. Severe environmental conditions were intentionally used to promote corrosion on the tested stainless steel products in order to evaluate the efficiency of CP. The study includes a modeling work aiming at predicting and designing adapted CP protection to modeled stainless steel units. An excellent correlation between modeling work and field measurements was found.
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Larche Nicolas, Dezerville Philippe, Le Flour Denise, Vinzio Pascal, Kofler Karl-Heinz, Thierry Dominique (2015). Corrosion of stainless steel components in seawater reverse osmosis desalination plants-investigations on adapted internal cathodic protection. Desalination And Water Treatment, 55(9), 2478-2490. Publisher's official version : https://doi.org/10.1080/19443994.2014.939499 , Open Access version : https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00344/45562/