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Physicochemical Description of Refinery High Temperature Naphthenic Acid Corrosion

Refinery high temperature naphthenic acid corrosion is known to generate oil soluble iron naphthenates and solid iron oxide as corrosion products. Associated chemical reactions have been written for a long time but are barely sufficient to resolve the comprehensive mechanism necessary to model their kinetics. A mechanism for naphthenic acid corrosion is proposed to be proceeding via formation of active intermediate by adopting the Lindemann-Hinshelwood approach. The rate law for the calculation of pure naphthenic acid corrosion rate was derived using a pseudo steady state hypothesis which could simulate laboratory corrosion data reported in the literature. The rate equation was also validated by experimental corrosion tests conducted in a high temperature flow-through reactors for carbon steel using a model oil solution of petroleum derived acids by manipulating solution concentration and temperature. Also, the formation of the solid iron oxide is proposed to be a result of the decay of active intermediate as an alternative mechanism in contrast with the currently accepted thermal decomposition pathway.
Product Number: 51324-20988-SG
Author: Ishan Patel; David Young; Gheorghe Bota
Publication Date: 2024
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$40.00
$40.00