NACE RP 04 03 : 2003
Withdrawn
Withdrawn
View Superseded by
AVOIDING CAUSTIC STRESS CORROSION CRACKING OF CARBON STEEL REFINERY EQUIPMENT AND PIPING
Available format(s)
Hardcopy , PDF
Language(s)
English
Published date
11-14-2003
Withdrawn date
03-25-2025
Superseded by
Excluding Tax where applicable
1. General
2. Cracking Mechanism
3. Use of Thermal Stress Relief to Mitigate the Probability of
Caustic SCC
4. Other Considerations
References
Bibliography
Appendix A - Caustic SCC Micrographs
Figures
Table
Provides guidance to those designing, fabricating, and/or maintaining carbon steel equipment and piping that is exposed to caustic environments.
| Committee |
STG 34
|
| DevelopmentNote |
Redesignated as NACE SP 04 03. (07/2008)
|
| DocumentType |
Standard
|
| ISBN |
1-57590-179-X
|
| Pages |
9
|
| PublisherName |
National Association of Corrosion Engineers
|
| Status |
Withdrawn
|
| SupersededBy |
| DIN EN ISO 21457:2010-12 | Petroleum, petrochemical and natural gas industries - Materials selection and corrosion control for oil and gas production systems (ISO 21457:2010) |
| NACE RP 04 72 : 2005 | METHODS AND CONTROLS TO PREVENT IN-SERVICE ENVIRONMENTAL CRACKING OF CARBON STEEL WELDMENTS IN CORROSIVE PETROLEUM REFINING ENVIRONMENTS |
| ISO 21457:2010 | Petroleum, petrochemical and natural gas industries — Materials selection and corrosion control for oil and gas production systems |
| BS EN ISO 21457:2010 | Petroleum, petrochemical and natural gas industries. Materials selection and corrosion control for oil and gas production systems |
| I.S. EN ISO 21457:2010 | PETROLEUM, PETROCHEMICAL AND NATURAL GAS INDUSTRIES - MATERIALS SELECTION AND CORROSION CONTROL FOR OIL AND GAS PRODUCTION SYSTEMS |
| EN ISO 21457:2010 | Petroleum, petrochemical and natural gas industries - Materials selection and corrosion control for oil and gas production systems (ISO 21457:2010) |
| 09/30167487 DC : 2009 | BS ISO 21457 - PETROLEUM, PETROCHEMICAL AND NATURAL GAS INDUSTRIES - MATERIALS SELECTION AND CORROSION CONTROL FOR OIL AND GAS PRODUCTION SYSTEMS |
Summarise