Course Details

CORROSION AWARENESS CONTROL AND MONITORING

Location
London, UK
Date
From Date:  04-Dec-2023   To Date:     08-Dec-2023
Duration
5 Days
Language
English
Discipline
Facility Integrity, Inspection, Metallurgy and Corrosion Engineering
Introduction

In order to proactively improve and enhance the safety reliability and profitability in chemical plants and oil field related plant and machinery, it is necessary to understand where why and how the corrosion related mechanisms cause damage which eventually lead to sudden failures. Such an understanding of failure mode helps to establish plant reliability and safety at optimal cost.

Objective

Upon successful completion of this course, the delegates will be able to:

  • Explain the fundamentals of material failure at normal and plant operating condition and why different material behave differently - strategic maintenance methods
  • Explain why plant aging can cause catastrophic failures and the methodology of inspection
  • Discuss the importance of monitoring and modern methods
  • Discuss Case studies from plant failures and failure analysis to reinforce understanding of theory
  • Describe corrosion in other structural materials as concrete fiberglass and non-metals

 

Audience

Candidates who intends taking certification- For those interested in learning fitness for service of plant and equipment- for Managers and staff interested in health safety and environment of unintended plant failure-for planning Managers interested in MRO and plant maintenance and know all about inspection and monitoring

This five-day intensive Short Course is intended for Engineers, Technicians, Managers, Supervisors, Salespersons, Inspectors, anyone needing a basic understanding of corrosion.

Content

Corrosion

The need for corrosion awareness

The cost of corrosion

Why metals and materials deteriorate

The impact of environment

The school textbook definition of corrosion

The modern definition of corrosion

The atomic theory

Setting up a corrosion cell in the lab.

Why different materials react in different ways and rates

More definitions of corrosion – spontaneous, unseen, irreversible

The mistaken common notion, anode, cathode

Polarization – the slowing down process

Tafel’s slope – a clue to control corrosion

Understanding corrosion – forms – causes –soil, water, bacteria, atmosphere, gases and vapours, and steam-operating conditions as pressure, temperature, velocity, stress, product input variations

Avoidance and control of each – explained through

Case studies.

Four-way method of controlling corrosion

What is cathodic protection – how it works – principles

Typical examples of CP

The galvanic and impressed.

The components

Coating – types

  • limitations
  • failure and detection
  • how it works with CP

Inhibitors   - types

  • limitations
  • case studies

Material selection and design

  • cost of overdesign
  • new materials
  • S Steel, High Ni alloys, fibre glass

Estimating corrosion loss

  • Faraday’s law
  • Weight loss, coupon
  • ER
  • Polarization techniques
  • NDT – Eddy – UT, PT, RT                       
  • Microscopy / lab techniques

Corrosion monitoring - coupon

  • Pig
  • Endoscopies
  • Acoustic
  • CP
  • Coating failure

Corrosion of - SS

  • Concrete
  • Fiberglass and plastics
  • Bacterial
  • Non-ferrous Al, Cu alloy

High temp. Corrosion.

Certificate

TRAINIT ACADEMY will award an internationally recognized certificate(s) for each delegate on completion of training.

Methodology

The training course will be highly participatory and the course leader will present, guide and facilitate learning, using a range of methods including formal presentation, discussions, sector-specific case studies and exercises.  Above all, the course leader will make extensive use of real-life case examples in which he has been personally involved. You will also be encouraged to raise your own questions and to share in the development of the right answers using your own analysis and experiences.  Tests of multiple-choice type will be made available on daily basis to examine the effectiveness of delivering the course.

  • 30% Lectures
  • 30% Workshops and work presentation
  • 20% Case studies & Practical Exercises
  • 10% Role Play
  • 10% Videos, Software or Simulators (as applicable) & General Discussions
Fees
£5,250