Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
769450 | Engineering Failure Analysis | 2009 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Pyrolysis furnace tubes made of HP45 heat-resistant steel casting to handle carbonaceous gases at about 850 °C in a petrochemical plant developed longitudinal cracks after less than one-third of the expected life. Detailed microstructural analysis showed that the cracks were developed by a ductile intergranular mode. This was correlated with high-temperature carburization attack leading to massive precipitation of intergranular carbides and a mixture of carbides and sigma phase within the matrix. Experimental results suggested that the highly reducing nature of the environment precluded the tube material from developing and maintaining a surface protective oxide scale, which facilitated the rapid inward diffusion of carbon.
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Authors
Η.Μ. Τawancy,