Abstract

ABSTRACT Internal corrosion is a problem for steel pipelines transporting natural gas or CO2 containing water and partial pressures of H2S higher than 0.3 kPa (0.05 psi). This work aims to mitigate internal corrosion in steel pipelines transporting natural gas containing H2S using cold spray coatings. Two types of the cold spray binary metallic coatings (zinc chromium (ZnCr), zinc niobium (ZnNb)) were studied using electrochemical techniques: potentiodynamic polarization (PDP), linear polarization resistance (LPR), and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). The corrosion resistance of cold spray coatings (ZnCr, ZnNb) was evaluated in an environment containing 4 bar CO2 pressure, simulating the partial pressures found in gas transmission lines over a solution of 3.5 wt.% NaCl heated to 40 °C. A concentration of 0.003 M Na2S2O3.5H2O, which corresponds to H2S partial pressures around 0.079 bar (1.146 psi), was used to simulate sour conditions. Post-corrosion surface characterization was performed using a scanning electron microscope (SEM) equipped with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscope (EDS) and X-ray diffraction analysis (XRD). The data showed that the presence of 0.003 M Na2S2O3.5H2O shifted the corrosion potential to more anodic values and decreased the corrosion current density. Both coatings showed similar behavior after 1 hour of exposure in the CO2/H2S environment, indicating that similar electrochemical reactions were occurring on ZnNb and ZnCr. SEM images and EDS surface analyses for specimens showed a significant change in the surface chemical composition of carbon steel coated with ZnNb and ZnCr after 24 hours of immersion. In the presence of thiosulfate (under sour conditions), the formation of corrosion product layers (ZnCO3 and ZnS) on top of ZnNb and ZnCr coatings increased their corrosion resistance, which helped to reduce their corrosion by a factor of 2. Under a sweet environment. The corrosion rates for steel coated with cold spray coatings after 14 days of exposure are lower than that for galvanized steel by a factor of 5 due to the ZnCO3 layer formed on top of the coatings. The ZnCO3 layer formed on the steel surface acts as a physical barrier against corrosion by blocking the diffusion of corrosive species to the surface. No localized attack was observed. ZnCr Cold spray coating with defect showed promising corrosion protection against CO2 corrosion (sweet corrosion) after 14 days of exposure to a CO2 environment. The scratch on the coating simulated damage created in service, and it was deep enough to expose the substrate material (steel). The formation of zinc oxide (ZnO) and zinc carbonate (ZnCO3) on the scratch confirmed the cathodic protection of the steel by ZnCr and ZnNb coatings.

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