Corrosion of pipelines used for CO2 transport in CCS: Is it a real problem?
Author(s)
Cole, Ivan S
Corrigan, Penny
Sim, Samson
Birbilis, Nick
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2011
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The transport of carbon dioxide (CO2) from capture to storage is a vital aspect of any CO2 capture and storage (CCS) process – and it is essential that it is effective, safe and economical. Transport by pipelines is one of the preferred options and thus, for safe operations, such pipelines should not be subject to internal corrosion. Present CO2 pipelines used for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) have suffered only minimal corrosion over the last 20 years, however, such pipelines operate under stringent regulations with regard to water and contaminant levels in the CO2 stream. This paper reviews the literature on the range of ...
View more >The transport of carbon dioxide (CO2) from capture to storage is a vital aspect of any CO2 capture and storage (CCS) process – and it is essential that it is effective, safe and economical. Transport by pipelines is one of the preferred options and thus, for safe operations, such pipelines should not be subject to internal corrosion. Present CO2 pipelines used for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) have suffered only minimal corrosion over the last 20 years, however, such pipelines operate under stringent regulations with regard to water and contaminant levels in the CO2 stream. This paper reviews the literature on the range of potential compositions in CCS CO2 streams and the likely phases that will be in such streams, the relevant history of CO2 pipelines, and laboratory studies of CO2 corrosion, with a view to understanding the corrosion threat to pipelines where CO2 is the primary fluid.
View less >
View more >The transport of carbon dioxide (CO2) from capture to storage is a vital aspect of any CO2 capture and storage (CCS) process – and it is essential that it is effective, safe and economical. Transport by pipelines is one of the preferred options and thus, for safe operations, such pipelines should not be subject to internal corrosion. Present CO2 pipelines used for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) have suffered only minimal corrosion over the last 20 years, however, such pipelines operate under stringent regulations with regard to water and contaminant levels in the CO2 stream. This paper reviews the literature on the range of potential compositions in CCS CO2 streams and the likely phases that will be in such streams, the relevant history of CO2 pipelines, and laboratory studies of CO2 corrosion, with a view to understanding the corrosion threat to pipelines where CO2 is the primary fluid.
View less >
Journal Title
International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control
Volume
5
Issue
4
Subject
Earth sciences
Environmental sciences
Engineering
Materials engineering not elsewhere classified