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Preventing Failures of Pressure Vessels
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Preventing Failures of Pressure Vessels

2-Day Training Course: Learning through case-by-case analysis. Comprehensive training using case studies to review pressure vessel & piping integrity management best practice to prevent future failures on plant operations

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overview

Key Learning Objectives

  • Understand the design and inspection codes of pressure equipment and specification
  • Pressure vessel and piping integrity and life management 101
  • Examine detail on damage mechanisms such as creep, corrosion, overload, fatigue
  • Observe life assessment techniques, repair methods and material selection
  • Develop competency in trouble shooting, failure and root cause analysis
  • Review various procedures to prevent failures
  • Assess a suite of methods used to complete failure investigations
  • Develop and present the required outcomes of failure investigations

About the Course

This course provides a fundamental grounding in critical pressure vessel integrity management how to investigate failures, incidents and unforeseen damage.

Failure investigation/root cause analysis should identify all the issues that need to be modified to ensure future long term operation. A major emphasis is placed on defining the key outcomes required from the investigations and development of action plans to ensure safe future operation.

A major emphasis is placed on defining the key outcomes required from the investigations and development of action plans to ensure safe future operation.

The course emphasises that the troubleshooting of failures of pressure equipment has to take into account a large range of factors including design, manufacturing and inspection processes and standards, operational procedures, national regulatory authorities, insurance and litigation.

Detailed case studies are a feature of the course, used to demonstrate a range of damage processes that can occur.

This course is intended for engineers and engineering management engaged in the operation, reliability management, analysis, inspection and maintenance of large industrial plants using pressure equipment.

Who Will Benefit

Job titles include:plant, mechanical, structural, reliability, process, project engineers and maintenance employees who operate or manage the reliability of processing plant or equipment.

Prerequisite: Participants should have an undergraduate engineering degree or equivalent experience in engineering/process plant management. A general knowledge of materials behaviour is helpful.

Terms & Conditions

To read the training course terms and conditions read more here

Course Outline

Tools & Methodologies

Design and inspection codes of pressure equipment and specification for procurement of pressure equipment

  • ASME Viii Div1
  • Material selection
  • Limitations of codes
  • Manufacturing records
  • Inspection codes such as AS 3788 Pressure Equipment – in service inspection

Procedures required to prevent failures

  • Risk based inspection
  • Process control
  • Life assessment
  • Literature

Trouble shooting, failure analysis and root cause analysis

  • Need for failure investigation
  • Defining aims of investigation
  • Obtaining data
  • Need for expert advise
  • Failure analysis methods
  • Root cause analysis – causal loops

Examine detail on damage mechanisms and assessment of damage

  • API 571 “Damage mechanisms effecting fixed equipment in the refining industry”
  • High temperature: Creep, creep fatigue, carburization, HTHA
  • Corrosion: Stress Corrosion Cracking (SCC), pitting, general loss
  • Mechanical: Fatigue, overload, wear, erosion
  • API 579 “Fitness for service”

Repair procedures to ensure future success

  • Repair procedures
  • Specification of replacement
  • Material selection
  • Stress analysis and fitness for service
  • Specialised inspection

Develop and present the required outcomes of failure investigations

  • Reporting
  • Development of recommendations/action plans
  • Presentation to regulators, insurance etc.
  • Cost analysis

 Case studies

A series of detailed case studies will be provided throughout this course.

The length of the case studies will very typically from 15–45 minutes but the course will be aimed on ensuring over 50% of the time is on case studies.

Each case study will cover details of the problem, the investigation carried out, discussion about possible scenarios, the actual recommendations made and the actions carried out to ensure future problem free operation.

The case studies will be chosen by assessing the participants’ needs, ensuring a range of failure mechanisms are covered such as corrosion, stress corrosion cracking, brittle overload, ductile overload, creep, hydrogen embrittlement, electrical damage etc.

In addition, participants may provide specific issues to be addressed in the course if required.

The following are examples of the case studies which can be provided:

  • Failure of boiler feed water heater due hydrogen/nitride cracking of P22 steel heat exchanger in high temperature ammonia
  • Failure of internals in ammonia converter
  • Risk based inspection of methanol, ammonia or refinery plants
  • Damage Nitric acid plant waste heat boilers
  • Waste heat boiler tube failure
  • Failure of high strength flange bolts on wellhead causing major blow out on gas production platform
  • Cracking of stainless steel heat exchanger tubes in cooling water in ammonia plant
  • Corrosion to admiralty brass heat exchanger
  • Brittle fracture of gas cylinder due to incorrect heat treatment
  • Fire in refinery due to blow out of pipe work as a result of rapid corrosion
  • Fire in port terminal pipe work due to electrical arcing
  • Overpressure in hydropower station penstock
  • Cracking of main steam header in thermal power station
  • Hydrogen cracking in duplex stainless steel welds on over shore platform pipe work
  • Defect in high pressure pipeline
  • Erosion damage to hydro power station due to erosion as a result of volcanic eruption
  • Hydrogen cracking in geothermal separator vessels
  • Risk of high temperature hydrogen attack in Methanol convertor
  • Cracking of bull tees in reformers
  • Corrosion/creep of tubes in refinery furnace
  • Corrosion and resurrection of hydro power station scroll case after 40 years
  • SCC cracking of power station boiler water seal
  • Creep failure of super heater tubing
  • Corrosion under insulation

On-site & in-house training

Deliver this course how you want, where you want, when you want – and save up to 40%! 8+ employees seeking training on the same topic?

Talk to us about an on-site/in-house & customised solution.

contact

Still have a question?

Sushil Kunwar
Training Consultant
+61 (0)2 9080 4395
training@informa.com.au

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