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Tag Archives: Hydrofluoric acid
Posted on September 29, 2017 by dean
Oilfields are subjected to a diversity of corrosive elements including carbonic acids, sour gas (H2S), and fracking/stimulant acids such as hydrochloric and hydrofluoric acid. Naphthenic acids and simple organic acids are also found in crude oil extraction. In conjunction to acids, these environments contain sand and other abrasive elements which … Continue reading →
Posted in Application, Blog, Corrosion Resistance, High Strength, High Temperature Resistance, Specialty Metal Fasteners | Tagged fracking corrosion, Hastelloy, hastelloy C2000, Hastelloy C276, Hydrochloric Acid, Hydrochloric acid resistance, Hydrofluoric acid, Incoloy, Incoloy 825, Incoloy 925, oil & gas corrosion, Oil Corrosion, sour gas, sour gas well, sulfur corrosion, Sulfur corrosion resistance, sulfur-induced stress cracking | 1 Comment
Posted on May 22, 2017 by dean
Q: I’m using hydrogen fluoride used in a manufacturing process to make refrigerants. I know it’s very corrosive and have tried both hastelloy and inconel fasteners, which I thought were super corrosion resistant. What am I doing wrong because the acid is still eating them? Should I try Tantalum? A: … Continue reading →
Posted on May 11, 2017 by dean
They rhyme, are both used in extreme environments, and are both nickel metal alloys, but Monel and Inconel are actually very different. But how? Let’s start with basic chemistry. Monel is a nickel-copper alloy and Inconel is a nickel-chromium alloy. So what does that mean for your extreme application? We … Continue reading →
Posted in Application, Blog, Corrosion Resistance, High Strength, High Temperature Resistance, Specialty Metal Fasteners | Tagged Alloy 400, Alloy 625, Corrosion, hastelloy C2000, High Temperature, Hydrofluoric acid, Inconel, Inconel 625, Monel, Monel 400, saltwater corrosion, sea water corrosion | 1 Comment