Material Selection Report
Material Selection Report
Material Selection Report
Controlled Document
Quest CCS Project
ECCN EAR 99
Security Classification
Disclosure None
Revision History
REVISION STATUS APPROVAL
Rev. Date Description Originator Reviewer Approver
Irina Ward,
Draft/Issued for Hironmoy
01 2011-07-21 Duane Serate, Magdy Girgis
Review Mukherjee
Simon Yuen
Hironmoy
02 2011-09-21 Issued for Approval
Mukherjee
All signed originals will be retained by the UA Document Control Center and an electronic copy will be stored in
Livelink
Summary
The material selection report updated has been prepared taking into consideration corrosion (pitting,
crevice, etc.), sour service (none for Quest CCS), environmental cracking. Material selection has been
carried out for the design as well as different operating temperature scenarios, including start-up,
shutdown cases. All package material requirements have been reviewed, e.g. valves, vessels, columns,
tanks, pipings, umbilicals, painting/coating, cladding.
Keywords
Materials, Corrosion
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. OBJECTIVE ....................................................................................................... 5
2. APPLICATION PROCESS SUMMARY ................................................................ 5
3. CODES, STANDARDS, AND REGULATIONS ....................................................... 6
3.1. Following is a list of applicable MSDs for the Capture Scope: ....................... 7
3.2. Material Selection Tables (MSTs) ................................................................. 7
4. CO2 PROCESS DESCRIPTION ............................................................................ 8
4.1. Amine ...................................................................................................... 8
4.2. CO2 Gas Compression ............................................................................. 10
4.3. TEG Unit and Dehydration Process ........................................................... 11
4.4. Super Critical CO2 Compression .............................................................. 11
4.5. Design Considerations for Materials.......................................................... 12
5. GENERAL MATERIALS SELECTION PHILOSOPHY .............................................. 12
5.1. Equipment Design Life Guidelines ............................................................. 13
5.2. Corrosion Allowance Guidelines............................................................... 14
5.3. Elastomers .............................................................................................. 14
6. CORROSION AND DEGRADATION MECHANISMS WITH PREVENTATIVE
MEASURES ..................................................................................................... 14
6.1. Amine Corrosion ..................................................................................... 14
6.2. Amine Stress Corrosion Cracking (ASCC) .................................................. 15
6.3. CO2 Corrosion ........................................................................................ 16
6.4. Brittle Fracture ......................................................................................... 16
6.5. Chloride Stress Corrosion Cracking (External) ............................................ 16
6.6. Chloride Stress Corrosion Cracking (Internal) ............................................. 17
6.7. Hydrogen Induced Cracking (HIC) ............................................................ 17
6.8. Hydrogen Embrittlement........................................................................... 17
6.9. Carbonate Stress Corrosion Cracking ....................................................... 17
6.10. CO/CO2 Stress Corrosion Cracking ......................................................... 18
7. CORROSION CONTROLS SUMMARY BY PROCESS AREA: MATERIAL
SELECTION CRITERIA ...................................................................................... 18
7.1. Cooling Water ........................................................................................ 19
8. MATERIALS OF CONSTRUCTION .................................................................... 19
8.1. Amine Absorption Regeneration ............................................................... 19
8.2. Wet CO2 Compression ............................................................................ 20
8.3. TEG Dryer .............................................................................................. 21
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1. OBJECTIVE
This document is a material selection report that summarizes the philosophy and materials
of construction for the Shell Canada Quest Carbon Capture and Sequestering (CCS)
Project. There are 4 main process stages: amine absorber and stripper, CO2 gas
compression, TEG dehydration, and dense phase CO2 compression. Each stage of the
process requires material selection that must consider its own need plus consideration of
downstream pipeline and injection operation to ensure process operability, longevity of
the project, and minimal downtime. The design life has been defined as 30 years.
The main concern is corrosion products and amine degradation contaminants and their
trace hydrates could precipitate in the pipeline and injection facilities and is addressed, in
part, by material selection and process design.
Unlike traditional amine units, the absorber is removing CO2 from the hydrogen CO2
feed. The rich and lean amine is a Shell proprietary 40% MDEA and 5% D DEDA specially
formulated to enhance CO2 recovery. In the amine loop, the material selection addresses
potential corrosion products and elastomer swelling.
The dense phase CO2 produced is essentially non-corrosive to carbon steel; however, the
CO2 can degrade elastomers and process excursions/upset conditions can lower the
temperature below the brittle transition points of carbon steel and induce explosive
decompression on elastomeric O-rings.
There are three (3) hydrogen manufacturing units (HMU1, HMU2 and HMU3) at the
Scotford Upgrader. The production of hydrogen represents a significant source of CO2
generated in the Upgrader, which is released from the reformer furnace stack. A
significant portion of the CO2 generated is a by-product of the steam reforming and shift
conversion reactions. The CO2 in the syngas stream from the HT-Shift Converter is cooled
at high pressure, which presents an energy efficient source for CO2 recovery, due to its
high partial pressure.
An amine absorption and regeneration system is used to capture and recover about 80%
of the total CO2 from the three HMU PSA feed gas streams. The absorption process used
is the ADIP-X process, which is an accelerated MDEA-based process licensed by Shell
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Global Solutions International (SGSI). The CO2 Rich Amine streams from each individual
Absorber is combined and stripped in the Amine Stripper to recover CO2 with about 95%
purity.
Material Selection for CO2 Capture Project Gas Plant. Corrosion data provided
by Shell dated June 7, 2010
API 571 Damage Mechanisms Affecting Fixed Equipment in the Refining Industry
API 945 Avoiding Environmental Cracking in Amine Units
CSA Z662- Oil and Gas pipeline systems
CSA Z245.1- Steel Pipe
DNV RP-J202- Design and Operation of CO2 Pipelines
DNV Energy Report- Project Specifics Guidelines for Safe, Reliable and Cost
Effective Transmission of CO2 in Pipelines
Amine Service Fluor Guideline, 2009
Wet Carbon Dioxide and Carbonic Acid Fluor Guideline, 2009
Corrosion 95, Paper 571, Corrosion in refinery Amine Systems
Material Selection Diagrams (MSDs)
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1. Amine
2. CO2 Gas Compression
3. TEG Unit and Dehydration
4. Supercritical CO2
4.1. Amine
The Amine system is divided into two main subsystems:
1. CO2 Capture
2. Amine Regeneration
1. CO2 Capture
Amine absorbers located within HMU 1 (Unit 241), HMU 2 (Unit 242) and HMU 3 (Unit
441) treat hydrogen raw gas at high pressure and low temperature to remove CO2
through intimate contact with a lean amine (ADIP-X) solution consisting of 40% MDEA, 5
% Piperazine and 55% water.
The hydrogen raw gas enters the 25-tray absorbers below tray 1 of the column at a
perature of 35C and pressure of ~3000 kPag. Lean amine solution enters at the top
temperature
of the column on flow control at a temperature of 30C.
The CO2 absorption reaction is exothermic, resulting in the treated gas leaving the top of
the absorber at 39C. The bulk of the heat generated within the absorber is removed
through the bottom of the column by the rich amine, which has a temperature of 64C.
Rich Amine from the three absorbers is collected into a common header and sent to the
Amine Regeneration section.
Warm treated gas exits the top of the absorbers and enters the 9-tray water wash vessels
below tray 1, where a circulating water system is used to cool the treated gas to a
perature of 35C. Pumps draw warm water from the bottom of the vessel and cool it
temperature
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to 33C in shell and tube exchangers using cooling water as the cooling medium. The
cooled circulating water is returned to the water wash vessel above tray 6 to achieve the
treated gas temperature specification. A continuous supply of wash water is supplied to
the top of the water wash vessel in the polishing section. The purpose of the water wash
is to remove entrained amine to less than 1 ppmw, and thus protect the downstream PSA
unit adsorbent from contamination.
A continuous purge of circulating water, approximately equal to the wash water flow, is
sent from HMU 1 and HMU 2 to the reflux drum in the Amine Regeneration section for
use as makeup water to the amine system. The purge of circulating water from HMU 3 is
sent to the existing Process Steam Condensate Separator, V-44111.
2. Amine Regeneration
Rich amine from the three absorbers is heated in the Lean/Rich Exchangers by cross-
exchange with hot lean amine from the bottom of the Amine Stripper. The Lean/Rich
Exchangers are Compabloc design to minimize plot requirements. The hot rich amine is
maintained at high pressure through the lean/rich exchangers by a back pressure
controller, which minimizes two-phase flow in the line. The pressure is let down across
the 2 x 50% back pressure control valves and fed to the Amine Stripper.
The two-phase feed to the Amine Stripper enters the column through two Schoepentoeter
inlet devices, which facilitate the initial separation of vapour from liquid. As the rich
amine flows down the trays of the Stripper, it comes into contact with hot stripping steam,
which causes desorption of the CO2 from the amine.
The Amine Stripper is equipped with 2 x 50% kettle reboilers that supply the heat required
for desorption of CO2, as well as producing the stripping steam required to reduce the
CO2 partial pressure. The low pressure steam supplied to the reboilers is controlled by a
feed-forward flow signal from the rich amine stream entering the stripper, and is trim-
controlled by a temperature signal from the overhead vapour leaving the stripper.
The CO2 stripped from the amine solution leaves the top of the Amine Stripper saturated
with water vapour at a pressure of 54 kPag. This stream is then cooled by the Overhead
denser to a temperature of 36C. The two-phase stream leaving the condenser enters
Condenser
the Reflux Drum, where separation of CO2 vapour from liquid occurs.
In addition to the vapour/liquid stream from the Overhead Condenser, the Reflux Drum
also receives purge water from the HMU 1 and HMU 2 Water Wash Vessels, as well as
knockout water from the CO2 Compression area. The Reflux Pumps draw water from the
drum and provide reflux to the Stripper for cooling and wash of entrained amine from the
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vapour. Column reflux is on flow control, with drum level control managed by purging
excess water to wastewater treatment.
CO2 is stripped from the rich amine to produce lean amine to a specification of 0.03 mol
CO2/mol amine by kettle-type reboilers and collected in the bottom of the Amine
Stripper. Hot lean amine from the bottom of the Stripper is pumped by the Lean Amine
Pumps to the Lean/Rich Exchanger, where it is cooled by cross-exchange with the
incoming rich amine feed from the HMU Absorbers. The lean amine is then further
cooled
ed to 50C by the Lean Amine Coolers, which use 25C cooling water in shell and
tube exchangers. The lean amine is then cooled to the final temperature of 30C by the
th
Lean Amine Trim Coolers, which are Plate and Frame exchangers using cooling water
supplied at 25C.
A slipstream of 25% of the cooled lean amine flow is filtered to remove particulates from
the amine. A second slipstream of 5% of the filtered amine is then further filtered through
a carbon bed to remove degradation products. A final particulate filter is used for
polishing of the amine and removal of any carbon fines from the carbon bed filter.
The filtered amine is then pumped by the Lean Amine Charge Pumps to the three Amine
Absorbers in HMU 1, HMU 2 and HMU 3.
Cooling and separation facilities are provided on the discharge of the first five
compressor stages. The condensed water streams from the interstage KO drums are
routed back to the Stripper Reflux Drum to be degassed and recycled as make up water
to the amine system. The condensed water from the Compressor 5th and 6th Stage KO
Drums and the TEG Inlet Scrubber are routed to the Compressor 4th stage KO Drum. This
routing reduces the potential of a high pressure vapour breakthrough on the Stripper
Reflux Drum and minimizes the resulting pressure drops. The 7th Stage KO Drum liquids
are routed to the TEG Flash Drum due to the likely presence of TEG in the stream.
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Discharge. At this pressure, the wet CO2 is air cooled to 36 C and dehydrated by
triethylene glycol (TEG) in a packed bed contactor.
A Triethylene Glycol (TEG) Unit consists of a lean TEG stream at a concentration greater
than 99 wt% TEG contacts the wet CO2 stream in an absorption column to absorb water
from the CO2 stream. The water rich TEG from the contactor is heated and letdown to a
flash drum which operates at approximately 330 kPag. This pressure allows the flashed
portion of dissolved CO2 from the rich TEG to be recycled to the Compressor Suction KO
Drum.
The flashed TEG is further preheated and the water is stripped in the TEG Stripper. The
column employs a combination of reboiling, via a stab-in reboiler using low temperature
HP Steam, and nitrogen stripping gas to purify the TEG stream. Nitrogen stripping gas is
required to achieve the TEG purity required for the desired CO2 dehydration, as the
maximum TEG temperature is limited to 204C to prevent TEG decomposition. Stripped
water, nitrogen and degassed CO2 are vented to atmosphere at a safe location above the
TEG Stripper.
The lean TEG is cooled in a Lean/Rich TEG Exchanger. The lean TEG is then pumped
and further cooled to 39C in the Lean TEG Cooler with cooling water and returned to the
TEG Absorber.
The CO2 Compressor is able to provide a discharge pressure as high as 14,000 kPa at a
reduced flow for start-up and other operating scenarios. The supercritical CO2 is cooled
in the Compressor Aftercooler to 43C, and routed to the CO2 Pipeline. This dense
phase CO2 is transported by pipeline from the Scotford Upgrader to the injection
locations that are located up to approximately 90 kilometers from the Upgrader.
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The mitigation of using Electrical Heat Tracing (EHT) to maintain system temperature for
non-flowing lines and during start-up and shutdown is consistent with current Scotford
operating practice. The reliability of EHT is consistent with the Scotford electrical system,
and if EHT fails due to a site-wide power failure during winter, Operations may hook up
a portable backup generator to provide power. Without the backup generator in this
case the process systems must be de-energized and drained.
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Materials selection documents include Materials Selection Tables, Process Flow Diagrams
and Materials Selection Diagram referenced in the Appendices.
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The selection of materials for equipment and piping are summarized in the Materials
Selection Diagrams and Material Selection Tables. See Appendix 1 and 2.
5.3. Elastomers
There are 2 materials issues with respect to elastomers: 1) Expansion of any elastomeric
component in the amine loop 2) Elastomeric O-rings compatibility with the high-pressure
CO2 gas and the dense phase CO2 streams (rapid decompression damage resistance and
chemical aging).
2. The elastomer usage for amine and CO2 resistance are addressed in
Appendices 4 and 5. A detailed evaluation of a number of various elastomers
performance in 100% CO2 depressurization (rapid decompression) and dense
phase is captured in SR.11.13061\, Appendix 6.
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protective than an iron sulphide film. This film is particularly a concern for
carbon steel, rich amine lines, but more of a concern for lean amine if the lean
amine is allowed through process conditions to go to ultra lean to values of
0.002 loading. Shell testing is ongoing to validate the actual corrosion rate in
lean amine.
The maximum velocity restrictions for rich amine and lean amine based on
carbon steel or stainless steel are as follows:
Carbon Steel:-
Pump / Reboiler inlet - 1 m/s Maximum
Piping and Pump outlet - 2 m/s
Stainless Steel:
5 m/s Maximum (excursion 9.2 m/s control valve modulating and shut
off)
2. Affected Materials Carbon steel
3. Prevention Quality of amine will be maintained through filtration and amine
make-up to minimize the corrosive effects of amine corrosion.
Concerns have been raised about potential carbonate stress corrosion cracking
(SCC) and all amine lines are either SS or PWHT CS, which mitigates the risk of
this mechanism.
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There was another concern about CO2 to CO ratios, the CO is out of range of
any potential carbonate formation.
NOTE: Shell Requirements: All carbon steel equipment and cold drawn bends and welds in
piping and tankage shall be stress relieved to avoid stress corrosion cracking in amine solvents .
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aluminum foil and epoxy coating. However, on Quest CCS process, humidity is
low and based on Shells previous experience, coatings are not required.
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In addition, all heat exchanger tubes in cooling water service have been upgraded t
o duplex SS to accommodate chloride excursions up to 500 ppm during
pinching operations.
8. MATERIALS OF CONSTRUCTION
b) The amine consists of 40% wt MDEA plus 5% wt Piperazine. Typical rich amine acid
loadings
ings are 0.65 mole CO2/mole amine, and typical lean amine acid loadings are
0.03 mole CO2/mole amine.
304/L SS was selected for all piping and equipment in the rich amine loop and
high-temperature piping in the lean amine loop. Laboratory testing
In the laboratory, (Appendix
testing 3) for
conducted of
the Shell proprietary rich amine resulted in corrosion products that were a concern
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c) The overhead wash-water system was also specified as 304/L SS due to a reported
acidic pH from the wet CO2.
e) For the lean amine, SS was specified for the piping and equipment down to the
lean-rich amine exchanger due to reported high corrosion rates and failures in this
area. Downstream of the lean-rich amine exchanger, the material is carbon steel
with a 0.3 mm corrosion allowance and PWHT to mitigate amine stress corrosion
cracking. The consensus of the industry is to PWHT lean amine regardless of
temperature due to reported failures.
f) The amine make-up tank has multiple purposes, and it is used for storage of rich-
lean amine and upset and maintenance storage. This tank was specified as lean
duplex SS with duplex flanges and fittings. Alternatively, carbon steel PWHT was
considered technically acceptable but rejected on a cost basis. Refer to Project
Decision Note PDN 059 for details of the decision.
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a) Piping and equipment from the wet CO2 compressor to the TEG dryer is304/L SS.
Due to the concerns of contaminants that could interfere with normal operations of
the downstream pipeline and equipment, the TEG dryer was specified as 304/L SS
up to the TEG lean-rich exchanger. Piping and equipment from the exchanger to
the TEG absorber is specified as carbon steel with 0.3 mm corrosion allowance.
b) Piping downstream of the dense-phase CO2 compressor to the battery limit is 304/L
SS as is the vent piping. This piping is used to depressurize the pipeline for upset,
maintenance, and when temperatures can drop to -75C for pure dense-phase CO2
and to -85C for dense-phase CO2 with contaminants.
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arrestors for the control of ductile running fracture. These requirements are listed in the
document
SR.11.12530 for material selection of pipelines in Appendix 8.
Material selection diagrams for the pipeline section listed below have been prepared by
Tri-Ocean Engineering (TOE) and reviewed by CRC. Refer Appendix 1 to review the
specific MSD.
TOE Drg. No. 09223-0-DG-00020.01 Rev B
TOE Drg. No. 09223-0-DG-00021.01 Rev B
TOE Drg. No. 09223-0-DG-00022.01 Rev B
TOE Drg. No. 09223-0-DG-00023.01 Rev B
8.7 Wells
Refer document 07-3-ZW-7180-0003 for details regarding material selection.
The following materials are recommended to be used for the tubular of the Quest
injectors:
Tubing: carbon steel
Casing: L80 but the bottom part (potentially exposed to wet CO2) will be
designed with UNS 31803( 25Cr duplex). Radway 8-19 bottom casing is
22Cr duplex snd a mitigation program is in place to monitor the potential for
22Cr material resistane to chlorides stress cracking. The well bottom has up to
140,000 ppm chlorides.
Packer tail: potentially superduplex , 25 Cr as it could be exposed to wet CO 2
and high chlorides
The importance of using superdupex (25Cr) steel for casing material exposed to wet
CO2 has been sown by the chloride stress cracking evaluation done on the 22Cr duplex
which showed some cracking initiation sites that characterizes this alloy as borderline
resistant,. Appendix 9.
Elastomers used in a CO2 well are subjected to two main risks:
(i.) The supercritical CO2 tends to be absorbed by elastomers, making them swell
which can potentially change their properties (e.g. the elastomer could
become brittle)
(ii.) A sudden release of pressure could induce Explosive Decompression (ED),
which would burst the elastomer
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Both these phenomena would compromise the function of the elastomers. Since these
elements are used as seals, sometimes for safety critical elements, the selection of
elastomers should be supported by lab experiments at the expected conditions.
Material selection Review performed by SGS for Barendrecht CCS project and other
CCS technical guidelines suggest high hardness hydrogenated nitrile based elastomers
as most suitable for CCS application where the partial pressure of CO 2 is above 10
MPa. Further lab tests have been performed at Calgary Research Centre, Appendix
and they 6
resulted in recommendations of high hardness fluoropolimeric grades which combine
resistance to both rapid decompression damage and chemical attack . An alternative
consideration is to avoid elastomers and design the well with metal-to-metal seals.
Special considerations are required for the start-up and shut down of the pipeline to
ensure that the dense phase is preserved. The use of nitrogen back pressure and
controlled de-pressurization will ensure that CO2 gas occurrence in the pipeline, in the
presence of any drop out water (such as caused by an upset in the dehydration system)
will not result in pipeline internal corrosion.
11. APPENDICES
Appendix 1 Materials Selection Diagrams (MSDs)
Appendix 2 Material Selection Tables (MST)
Appendix 3: GS 10 53443 Material testing program for CO2 capture project-
Gas plant
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