Design overview of high pressure dense phase CO2 pipeline transport in flow mode

Kumar Patchigolla, John E. Oakey

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

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Abstract

In open literature, there is little information available with regards to the engineering and technological issues for material corrosion, in relation to high pressure supercritical CO2 pipeline transport from single point sources, such as the power industry. A typical CO2 pipeline is designed to operate at high pressure in the dense phase. However, it is evident that although there is considerable experience of testing materials in lower pressure gaseous CO2 in the oil and gas industry, there is little understanding of the behaviour of pipeline materials when in contact with impure CO2 captured either from power plants or the oil and gas industry.
In this particular project development, a dynamic dense phase CO2 corrosion rig has been built (conditions: ∼85 bar, 40 °C and up to 5 l/min flow rate) in flow mode, to understand the effect of impurities (SO2, O2, H2, NO2 & CO) present in captured CO2 on the pipeline transport materials. This unique facility in the UK was developed via the MATTRANS project funded by the E.ON-EPSRC strategic partnership (EP/G061955/1). The test rig includes different metallic materials (X grade steel: X60, X70 and X100) to assess the corrosion of pipelines, and different geometry components (tubes, plates, charpy and tensile coupons), to assess ageing and decompression behavior of polymeric seals (Neoprene, fluorocarbon, ethylene and Buna N) under water-saturated dense phase CO2 with different impurity concentrations (0.05 mol % SO2; 4 mol % O2; 2 mol % H2; 0.05 mol % NO2; 1 mol % CO). The dynamic data generated from this dense phase CO2 corrosion rig will give vital information with regards to pipeline suitability and lifetimes, when operating with dense CO2.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3123-3130
Number of pages8
JournalEnergy Procedia
Volume37
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Aug 2013
Externally publishedYes

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