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Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. -- Metals Solutions -- Ask the Expert
     
 

 

Don Bowe
Sr. Principal Industry Engineer


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Ask the Expert -- Question

I’m experiencing intermittent oxidation in my furnace. Could leaks in the nitrogen houseline be the problem?

 

 

 

Ask the Expert -- Answer

 

 

 

 

 

Yes, leaks in any pressurized high-purity gas line can cause intermittent oxidation. There are several possible causes. One is through retrodiffusion—the movement of impurities from the surrounding air to a high-pressure, low-impurity gas houseline. This is driven by concentration gradients, not pressure gradients, and is aggravated by changes in flow rate, pressure or piping temperature.

Air Products industry specialists can help you determine the cause of your problem. Since the oxidation is intermittent, you’ll need to continuously monitor your nitrogen houseline for leaks with a trace oxygen analyzer. For combustible gas lines, a combustible gas sniffer can also be used. Once impurities are found, the source of the leak can be identified using various techniques, including soap bubble testing, static pressure testing or helium mass spectrometry. Leaks often occur in weld cracks, mechanical joints, valve packing and loose fittings.

To help minimize wasted product and part oxidation, call us for a leak detection or full process audit at 800-654-4567.