A highly carburized HP40-Mod alloy ethylene pyrolysis tube was characterized by means of scanning electron microscopy with backscatter electron imaging, electron back-scattered diffraction, energy dispersive spectroscopy, and etching using the NACE International Standard Test Method for evaluation of carburization of ethylene pyrolysis tubes. The response of the tube to eddy current non-destructive testing was measured using the carburization crawler under development at Quest Integrity NZL Ltd. The matrix was significantly depleted of chromium, as low as 4 wt% Cr at the inner wall. M 23 C 6 carbides transformed to M 7 C 3 at the inner wall region and NbC carbides partially transformed to the chromium-rich g-carbide at the outer wall region, both of which likely contributed to the chromium depletion of the matrix. The present results indicate that the NACE etchant attacks the austenitic matrix where chromium content is below approximately 12wt%. A comparison to other ex-service tubes indicates that matrix chromium content and the location of the M 23 C 6 /M 7 C 3 transformation front are useful microstructural characteristics for interpreting eddy current NDT response.
Ethylene is used extensively in the production of plastics, cabling, and automotive products. It is typically produced by the thermal cracking (pyrolysis) of more complex hydrocarbons, such as naphtha or ethane, at 950 to 1100°C inside HP alloy tubes (25%Cr-35%Ni) within an ethylene pyrolysis furnace. The main contributor to the failure of ethylene pyrolysis tubes is carburization of the tubes, which causes an increase in internal volume, a loss in weldability and a reduced ability to withstand thermal cycles [1][2][3][4]. Knowing the level of carburization of a tube in-situ can assist in remaining life estimates based on Finite Element Modeling, thermography, and fracture mechanics. Due to the changes in the microstructure and magnetic properties of the tubes over their service life, the level of carburization can be detected non-destructively using eddy current probes [3] and a tube crawler system [5]. However, the eddy current system requires calibration on ex-service tubes that have had their microstructure, mechanical properties and magnetic response characterized.The growth of chromium carbides and other chromium-rich phases due to carbon ingress results in a depletion of chromium in the matrix. In the as-cast condition the matrix is paramagnetic, but as carburization progresses it tends towards the binary Fe-Ni system and becomes progressively more ferromagnetic [3,4,[6][7][8]. The change in bulk permeability of the tube is measured by the eddy current system. As such, the volume fractions of the phases that contribute to the matrix chromium depletion and the distribution of these phases across the tube wall are of interest. The volume fractions and distributions are being characterized by way of imaging the tube microstructure along radial wall profiles, and using a combination of two programs, ilastik and FIJI, for the segmentation and processing of the images. ilastik is a free software package that enables automated classification and segmentation of batches of images [9].Initially, BSE (backscatter electron) images were proposed for image analysis, due to their high resolution, wide range of grayscale values for differentiating phases, and relatively short collection time. However, one major feature of BSE images of ex-service tubes proved to be detrimental to the success of automated segmentation using ilastik. A "watermark" effect is often visible in the austenitic matrix of highly carburized tubes when imaging in BSE mode, causing significant gradients in grayscale. Another phase often present in the microstructure of ex-service tubes, the η -carbide, also exhibits gradients in grayscale across the phase regions. As a result, automated segmentation of the BSE images of highly carburized tubes in ilastik proved to be impossible, as ilastik is unable to distinguish the η-carbide from regions of the matrix that exhibit this "watermark" effect. Despite testing numerous variations in the mechanical polishing parameters, the "watermark" effect was unable to be minimized. It is possible that it is a feat...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.