Titanium Pipes
Titanium Piping Systems have been shown to be particularly cost-effective techniques of avoiding destructive corrosion in chemical processing lines. The following information provides background on Titanium, its properties, strengths, and how Titanium Pipe could be the key to corrosion prevention in your application.
How Titanium Pipes are made
The fabrication of ingots is the first step in the manufacturing process. The titanium sponge will be melted at high temperatures in a furnace, and the carbon that remains will be removed with the help of oxygen. After that, the titanium will be placed into a copper crucible and allowed to cool. Titanium Grade 2 Pipes is mined from a variety of naturally occurring ores across the planet. Ilmenite, leucoxene, and rutile are the most common ores used to make titanium.
Higher hardness and strength of Titanium Pipes
The tensile strength of commercial-grade titanium is normally around 63,000 psi. Commercially pure titanium has the softest grade of roughly 240 MPa, but high-strength alloys can reach 1,400 MPa.
An application where Titanium Pipes are Used
Instrumentation, Ferrules, Offshore Fire Water Systems, Structural Purposes, Medical, Pharmaceutical, Economizers, Condenser, Furniture industries, domestic applications, bus body, fencing, Cryogenic Tube, Offshore construction, Food and pharmaceutical processing, Desalination and wastewater projects, and Electrical Submersible Pump are some of the applications where titanium pipes are used.
Titanium Pipes have Excellent Corrosion Resistant Properties
In terms of corrosion resistance, Titanium Grade 5 Pipes are among the best among naturally occurring metals. When exposed to air and moisture, a persistent, continuous, and strongly adherent protective oxide film forms nearly immediately on the metal’s surface.
Chemical Resistance Of Titanium pipes
Reduced acids such as sulfuric, hydrochloric (HCl), and phosphoric acid are moderately resistant to titanium pipes. Corrosion rates increase as temperature and acid concentration rise.
The temperature of titanium pipes
Creep and oxidation resistance limit the maximum service temperature of Titanium pipe alloys. Today’s Titanium pipe alloys are designed to withstand temperatures up to 600°C.