Walk through the piping of a fertiliser plant — whether it produces urea, ammonium nitrate, DAP, or SSP — and you will encounter some of the most chemically diverse and mechanically demanding process streams in the entire process industry. Sulphuric acid at concentrations ranging from 5% to 98%. Phosphoric acid laced with fluoride and silica. Ammonium sulphate slurries. Nitric acid in the nitrophosphate route. And throughout all of this, a fundamental need for valves that simply do not corrode, do not contaminate the product, and do not require constant maintenance attention.
Lined valves — primarily PTFE-lined and hard
rubber-lined depending on the specific service — have become the workhorses of
fertiliser plant piping for exactly these reasons. But choosing the right lined
valve for a fertiliser application is not as simple as selecting the most
chemically resistant lining available. It requires matching the lining material
to the specific fluid, concentration, temperature, and flow characteristics of
each individual service — and understanding where lined valves genuinely outperform
the alternatives.
Sulphuric Acid: The Concentration Paradox
Sulphuric acid is the single most consumed
chemical in fertiliser production, used primarily in phosphoric acid
manufacture via the wet process. It presents a counterintuitive corrosion
behaviour that catches out engineers who are new to the chemistry: concentrated
sulphuric acid (above 93%) is relatively non-corrosive to carbon steel because
a protective iron sulphate layer forms on the metal surface. Dilute sulphuric
acid (below approximately 70%) is aggressively corrosive to carbon steel,
stainless steel, and most common engineering alloys.
This concentration dependence has a direct
implication for lined valve specification in fertiliser plants. Dilute
sulphuric acid lines — acid at 5–70% concentration, common in absorber tail gas
scrubbing sections, dilution systems, and product treatment — are exactly the
service condition where PTFE-lined valves provide the most compelling
advantage. A PTFE-lined butterfly valve or ball valve in dilute sulphuric acid
service will outlast an equivalent carbon steel or stainless steel valve by
years, at lower cost and with no corrosion-driven performance degradation over
time.
Phosphoric Acid: When the Fluid Carries
Solids
Wet process phosphoric acid — produced by
reacting phosphate rock with sulphuric acid — is not a clean fluid. It carries
suspended solids including calcium sulphate (gypsum), silica, and unreacted
phosphate particles. This slurry character adds a wear dimension to the
corrosion challenge: the valve lining must resist not only chemical attack but
also abrasive erosion from entrained solids.
For phosphoric acid slurry service,
rubber-lined valves — specifically hard natural rubber or EPDM-lined diaphragm
and butterfly valves — are often preferred over PTFE lining because rubber's
elastic surface provides better abrasion resistance than the harder, more
brittle PTFE. However, rubber lining has a lower chemical resistance ceiling,
and for concentrated phosphoric acid above 50% or at temperatures above 60°C,
PTFE lining becomes the only polymer option with adequate chemical resistance.
In practice, fertiliser plant engineers often specify rubber-lined valves in
the lower-concentration, higher-solids sections of phosphoric acid production,
transitioning to PTFE-lined valves in the higher-concentration finishing and
storage sections.
Ammonium Nitrate and Urea: A Different Kind
of Challenge
In urea and ammonium nitrate plants, the
primary corrosion driver shifts away from strong acids toward the specific
corrosive properties of ammoniacal and nitrate-containing solutions. Ammonium
nitrate solution is a powerful oxidiser, and its interaction with carbon steel
can lead to stress corrosion cracking under certain conditions. Urea process
condensate and carbamate solutions are corrosive to most metals at the elevated
temperatures used in modern urea plants.
PTFE-lined valves are used extensively in
urea plant washing sections, condensate treatment, and product solution
transfer lines where the fluid is too dilute or too low in temperature for the
high-alloy materials used in the reactor and stripper sections. The lining
provides both the chemical barrier and a smooth internal surface that resists
product build-up — a practically important feature in ammonium nitrate and urea
service where crystallisation on valve internals can cause operating
difficulties over time.
Nitric Acid Service in Fertiliser
Production
Nitric acid — used in the production of
ammonium nitrate and calcium ammonium nitrate fertilisers — presents a specific
challenge for polymer lining selection. Nitric acid is a strong oxidiser, and
while PTFE and PFA are both resistant to nitric acid across the full commercial
concentration range, some rubber lining materials are not suitable for
oxidising acids. Specifying a rubber-lined valve in nitric acid service — even
inadvertently, through a purchase order that does not specify lining material —
can result in rapid lining degradation and process contamination.
For nitric acid lines in fertiliser plants,
PTFE lining should be specified explicitly, with the acid concentration and
operating temperature stated clearly in the purchase specification. PFA lining
offers an additional advantage in nitric acid service due to its lower
permeability, which reduces the risk of acid diffusing through the lining and
causing under-lining corrosion of the carbon steel body — a failure mode that
is invisible during operation and only discovered when the valve fails
catastrophically.
Getting the Specification Right
The fertiliser industry's fluid diversity —
multiple acids, varying concentrations, slurry streams, oxidising environments
— means that no single lined valve configuration covers every application in
the plant. A robust specification practice identifies the fluid, concentration,
temperature range, and solids content for each service individually, then
selects the lining material accordingly. PTFE for dilute sulphuric acid,
phosphoric acid finishing, and nitric acid. Rubber for phosphoric acid slurry
in lower-concentration sections. PFA where permeation resistance is the
critical requirement. Getting these decisions right at the design stage is far
less costly than replacing incorrectly specified valves after the plant is in
operation.
No comments:
Post a Comment