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De-ethanizer reboilers in a Natural Gas Liquid Fractionation (NGLF) plant fouled repetitively. Samplesof deposited sludge were collected and analyzed. Results of the sludge samples analyses reveal achemical composition typical of black powder: Magnetite (Fe3O4), Goethite ( -FeOOH) and traceamounts of Quartz (SiO2). By process of elimination, pipeline loops were the suspected source ofthese solids. The results show that Fe3O4 is the main component which normally originates in thesecases from a process of dissolved oxygen corrosion due to the presence of very small amounts ofoxygen and water in the pipeline. The presence of oxygen and water in the pipeline could be due to theexposure of the pipeline to the atmosphere during pipeline construction or other major repairs. Silicondioxide (SiO2) is a natural compound of silicon and oxygen found mostly in sand which again couldenter into the pipeline during construction or major repairs. For comparison and possible new insights,results of previous studies conducted internally were also reviewed. Based on identified types ofcorrosion and chemical reactions products, a reversed sequence of events was reconstructed. Themain corrosion mechanisms proposed are oxygen corrosion, under-deposit corrosion, andmicrobiologically-influenced corrosion (MIC), as well as erosion of mill scale by sand particles. Thelaboratory analyses were conducted using X-Ray Diffraction (XRD), Wavelength Dispersive X-RayFluorescence (WDXRF) spectrometry, Thermogravimetric Analysis (TGA), and EnvironmentalScanning Electron Microscopy integrated with Energy Dispersive X-Ray Spectroscopy (ESEM/EDS).
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Black Powder is a phenomenon that all oil and gas companies are facing and presenting a variety of problems in associated processing equipment and pipelines, such as flow inefficiency, product contamination, wear, plugging and under deposit corrosion, among others. Another major concern is the possible formation of elemental Sulfur (S8), which could be produced as a by-product of oxidation of iron sulfides. It also can be produced from H2S dissociation at elevated temperatures or by microbiological reactions, involving the reduction of sulfate.