[0001] The invention relates to a process for the cleaning during idle periods of metallic,
for example iron or steel, internal surfaces of equipment used in the chemical industry,
in which a cleaning fluid containing water, an acid and a corrosion inhibitor is pumped
through the interior of the equipment at a flow rate of at least 0.5 m/s. Examples
of such equipment include reactors, heat exchangers, pipes, pumps, valves distillation
columns and steam boilers.
[0002] A process as mentioned above is known from the French patent specification no. 1
377 782. According to this patent specification, piping systems are cleaned by causing
an acid, such as hydrochloric acid or sulphuric acid, to which a corrosion inhibitor
has been added, to circulate through them at a liquid flow rate given as 1 m/s. Despite
the presence of a corrosion inhibitor, the surfaces to be cleaned according to this
process are attacked by the acid, and that more seriously as higher flow rates are
employed. An effective treatment of the surfaces to be cleaned with an acid in this
fashion leads to significant concentrations of ferric ions which have a marked corrosive
effect on the iron or steel wall. Corrosion by ferric ions cannot be combated adequately
by the use of corrosion inhibitors such as hexamethylenetetramine, hydrazine, alkaloids
and quaternary ammonium compounds and may even occur to such a degree that after the
cleaning operation pitting and scoring are observed in the metal of the cleaned equipment.
[0003] Pitting and scoring are encountered especially with unalloyed and low-alloy steels
which are widely used in steam boilers. The corrosion renders the metal surfaces rough,
causing a reduction in flow rate of the water in the evaporator tubes of steam boilers,
whereby the heat transfer is decreased and the wall temperatures in the installation
locally rise.
[0004] When combinations of a nobler and a less noble metal are present in the equipment
to be cleaned, an intensified corrosive attack on the less noble metal is found to
occur. It is indeed possible to reduce this intensified corrosion, for instance by
blanking off or removing the nobler metal from the equipment before the cleaning operation,
but it will be obvious that in actual practice such a step is, to say the least, inconvenient
and often impracticable.
[0005] It has been found that when steel comes into contact with a hydrochloric-acid bath
which is kept in motion and which contains a corrosion inhibitor and ferric compounds,
at a temperature as low as 20°C 50% of the ferric ions are reduced within two hours
to ferrous ions at the expense of the equivalent amount of steel which goes into solution.
At 50°C, a normal temperature for cleaning steam boilers, for example, this degree
of corrosion is even reached within one hour. As it may take several hours to fill
a fairly sizable steam boiler with cleaning fluid by means of a circulating pump,
severe corrosion has already set in during the filling. It also follows that no substantial
improvement can be achieved by repeated withdrawal of the cleaning acid containing
the ferric ions and replacement with fresh acid, quite apart from the greatly increased
cost.
[0006] The Dutch patent specification no. 155 315 proposes that in a cleaning fluid which
is pumped around in the interior of iron or steel equipment for the removal of rust,
for example, and which contains water, an acid and a corrosion inhibitor, in addition
a stannous salt be dissolved and that the composition of the cleaning fluid be controlled
during operation by measurement of the redox potential. In this system, the addition
of fresh stannous salt, as the need arises, during operation serves as a means to
keep the redox potential of the cleaning fluid below a limiting value which, when
measured with a platinum electrode against a saturated calomel-KCl electrode, amounts
to 280 mV. In the Dutch patent specification no. 155 315 the preferred stannous salt
soluble in the cleaning fluid is stannous chloride and the preferred cleaning acid
is hydrochloric acid.
[0007] The process described in the Dutch patent specification no. 155 315 has the disadvantage
that it is hardly, if at all, applicable in a great many industrialized countries,
because stringent environmental requirements practically preclude the use of stannous
salts, whilst the discharge of tin-containing substances is even prohibited.
[0008] The object of the present invention is to provide an environmentally acceptable process
for the cleaning during idle periods of metallic, for example iron or steel, internal
surfaces of equipment used in the chemical industry, in such a fashion that no corrosions
of the surfaces to be cleaned occurs. To achieve this goal, a process of the type
mentioned hereinbefore is according to the invention characterized in that the cleaning
fluid is passed through a reduction filter disposed outside the equipment, which filter
contains a substantially metallic packing with the highest practicable surface-to-weight
ratio, and that the composition of the cleaning fluid is controlled during operation
by measurement of the redox potential, which is maintained below a limiting value
and amounts to nearly 280 mV or less, when measured with a platinum electrode against
a saturated calomel-KCl electrode. The use of the substantially metallic (for instance,
steel, iron or aluminium) packing, which is preferably steel wool with a surface-to-weight
ratio of e.g. 15 m²/kg, ensures that ferric ions formed through the action of the
acid are very effectively reduced to ferrous ions. Thus, corrosive attack on the surfaces
to be cleaned is obviated in an environmentally acceptable manner.
[0009] One embodiment of a process according to the invention is characterized in that the
packing consists of fine-pored steel wool, iron powder or aluminium powder.
[0010] A further embodiment of a process according to the invention is characterized in
that the redox potential is measured in a filtrate of the reduction filter.
[0011] The process according to the invention can be carried out in practice as follows.
After calculation of the overall surface area to be cleaned of, for instance, a steam
boiler the reduction filter is provided with a steel-wool packing having a surface
area at least ten times as large. Thereupon the boiler is filled with a one-percent
inhibited hydrochloric-acid solution which is circulated at room temperature, i.e.
20°C, at a rate in m³/h at least four times as high as that of the contents of the
boiler. This procedure ensures that the iron oxides slowly pass into solution whereas
the ferric compounds are quickly reduced. Then, the acid concentration is slowly raised
to the requisite level, normally 4 to 5%. The outlet for draining the cleaning acid
from the steam boiler (suction line - circulation pump) must be disposed as low as
possible, such that the hydrochloric acid, which may be rich in ferric ions, can be
discharged most quickly to the reduction filter. In order to accelerate the cleaning
process, the temperature of the circulating acid may, if desired, be raised to, say,
50°C.
[0012] After the cleaning, the hydrochloric acid is neutralized with sodium hydroxide to
a pH of 7 or 8, whereby sodium chloride and water are formed. In the treatment of
the neutral sodium-chloride-rich waste water, the iron compounds present are quickly
oxidized to ferric compounds, which does not give rise to environmental problems.
As a matter of fact, the corrosion inhibitor is biologically degradable, hence also
ecologically acceptable.
[0013] It is to be noted that the process according to the invention makes it possible to
clean the internal surfaces of industrial equipment without any corrosive attack,
when constructed in any of the following metals: steel 37; carbon steel 50-60; 1%
Cr - ½% Mo steel; 5% Cr - ½% Mo steel; copper; brass; aluminium brass; cast bronze;
copper nickel 90-10; copper nickel 70-30; inconel; nionel; nickel; monel; hastelloy.
[0014] The invention also relates to a reduction filter suitable for use in a process according
to the invention, which reduction filter is characterized in that it substantially
comprises a vessel with mutually spaced strainer discs between which the substantially
metallic, for example iron or steel, packing can be contained, which vessel is provided
very nearly at the location of either end with an inlet and an outlet port, respectively,
for the cleaning fluid.
[0015] One embodiment of a reduction filter according to the invention is characterized
in that the packing in the form of roll-up mats can be coiled round a core of the
vessel between the mutually spaced strainer discs.
[0016] A further embodiment of a reduction filter according to the invention is characterized
in that the reduction filter is transportable. In consequence, the process according
to the invention can be flexibly operated, for instance on board of (sea-going) vessels.
[0017] A reduction filter and a process according to the invention will now be elucidated
further with reference to the accompanying figures 1 and 2.
[0018] Figure 1 represents a reduction filter in the form of a vessel 1 which has been made
of a pressure-resistant material that is impervious to acids up to a temperature of
at least 70°C. As regards pressure resistance, it is to be noted that the vessel 1
must be capable of withstanding a pressure of at least 3 bar. To ensure durability,
the vessel 1 should preferably be made in a glass fibre-reinforced acid-proof polyester.
[0019] The vessel 1 is provided with two detachable, fixed or movable strainer discs 2,
3, preferably consisting of perforated polypropylene trays, whilst fine steel-wool
mats 5 have been coiled round a core 4 of the vessel 1. The cleaning fluid which contains
water, an acid and a corrosion inhibitor is, after having been pumped through the
interior of the equipment to be cleaned, introduced through an inlet 6 (arrow 7) into
the vessel 1 and, after having been filtered, passes through an outlet 8 (arrow 9)
to the interior of the equipment to be cleaned.
[0020] The vessel 1 has a drain cock 10, permitting check measurements to be carried out
in the circulating cleaning fluid. By means of this drain cock 10 the cleaning fluid
may be discharged, if necessary. Inside the drain cock 10 a hose may be connected
for the continuous measurement of redox potentials, the determination of the non-corrosivity
of the cleaning fluid and the removal of air bubbles, if any.
[0021] When the need arises to replace the steel wool 5 or to neutralize the cleaning fluid,
this fluid is passed, for instance by means of a three-way cock mounted near the inlet
6, direct through the core 4 - instead of over the steel wool 5 - and then withdrawn.
The cleaning fluid is neutralized with, for instance, caustic soda or another base,
whereupon it is processed by a waste-water purification plant. In actual practice,
it has not been found feasible to neutralize the cleaning fluid during its passage
over the steel wool 5, because in that case the fine-pored steel wool 5 would have
become clogged and unsuitable for further use.
[0022] Provided that the appropriate inhibitors are used, the reduction filter removes harmful
ferric, cupric, cuprous and other corrosive ions from hydrochloric acid (at concentrations
of 0.5 - 15%), but also from the cleaning acids:
hydrofluoric acid (at concentrations of 0.5 - 10.0%),
sulphuric acid (at concentrations of 0.5 - 20.0%),
citric acid (at concentrations of 3.0 - 15.0%),
phosphoric acid (at concentrations of 1.0 - 10.0%),
hydroxyacetic acid (at concentrations of 1.0 - 10.0%),
formic acid (at concentrations of 2.0 - 15.0%),
sulphamic acid (at concentrations of 1.0 - 15.0%),
ethylenediaminetetra-acetic acid (at all usable concentrations),
and from mixtures of these acids or their salts.
[0023] Figure 2 affords a clear picture of the conditions that may occur during chemical
cleaning of, for instance, a fouled steam boiler with inhibited hydrochloric acid,
without specification of the relevant corrosion values which have been established.
[0024] When cleaning is carried out according to the process of the invention, the redox
potential will be 280 mV or lower, which means no corrosion ("safe area; no attack").
[0025] Even when only 0.5 g of ferric ions per litre is present in the cleaning acid, as
will occur with many known cleaning procedures by a conservative estimate (redox potentials
of 300 to 400 mV), corrosion will manifest itself ("slight attack").
[0026] During cleaning tests according to the "classical" process, redox potentials of 500
mV and over were observed, which were invariably attended with serious to very severe
corrosion of steel and other construction materials ("serious attack to very severe
corrosion").
1. A process for the cleaning during idle periods of metallic, for example iron or
steel, internal surfaces of equipment used in the chemical industry, in which a cleaning
fluid containing water, an acid and a corrosion inhibitor is pumped through the interior
of the equipment at a flow rate of at least 0.5 m/s, characterized in that the cleaning fluid is passed through a reduction filter disposed outside the equipment,
which filter contains a substantially metallic packing with the highest practicable
surface-to-weight ratio, and that the composition of the cleaning fluid is controlled
during operation by measurement of the redox potential, which is maintained below
a limiting value and amounts to nearly 280 mV or less, when measured with a platinum
electrode against a saturated calomel-KCl electrode.
2. A process according to claim 1, characterized in that the packing material is selected from the group of steel, iron and aluminium.
3. A process according to claim 2, characterized in that the packing consists of fine-pored steel wool, iron powder or aluminium powder.
4. A process according to any one of the preceding claims, characterized in that the redox potential is measured in a filtrate of the reduction filter.
5. A reduction filter suitable for use in a process according to any one of the preceding
claims, characterized in that it substantially comprises a vessel with mutually spaced strainer discs between which
the substantially metallic, for example iron or steel, packing can be contained, which
vessel is provided very nearly at the location of either end with an inlet and an
outlet port, respectively, for the cleaning fluid.
6. A reduction filter according to claim 5, characterized in that the packing in the form of roll-up mats can be coiled round a core of the vessel
between the mutually spaced strainer discs.
7. A reduction filter according to claim 5 or 6, characterized in that it is transportable.