Facing production line shutdowns and sudden efficiency drops? Plate heat exchanger failures can bring operations to a standstill. A recent maintenance support report provides a comprehensive analysis of common issues in these systems and offers targeted strategies to enhance reliability and performance.
The report identifies two critical components as the main sources of failure: heat transfer plates and sealing gaskets. Plate issues include corrosion, fatigue cracking, and deformation, while gasket problems involve distortion or swelling. These failures range from performance degradation to complete shutdowns, causing significant production losses.
Corrosion-resistant metals like stainless steel typically form a protective oxide layer. General corrosion occurs when this layer fails to form properly, leading to uniform surface degradation characterized by loss of metallic luster and increased roughness.
Common in stainless steel systems, this occurs in structural gaps, gasket contact areas, and under deposits. These oxygen-deprived zones experience progressive breakdown of the protective layer, accelerating corrosion over time.
Solid particles in fluids continuously impact metal surfaces, stripping protective films and causing localized deep corrosion. This typically appears in high-velocity areas like pipe constrictions or bends, with progression rates depending on material properties, temperature, and flow conditions.
Under internal or external stress, corrosion initiates at metal weak points and propagates into cracks. Stressed areas experience protective film breakdown, atomic migration, and void formation, accelerating corrosion until fracture occurs.
Material failure from cyclic loading, even below strength limits. Repeated stress causes localized plastic deformation, micro-crack formation, and eventual structural failure.
Primary causes include over-tightening, foreign object intrusion, and gasket expansion. Water hammer effects from rapid pump/valve operations can also deform plates by creating pressure shocks that distort gasket grooves and contact points.
Occurs when introducing cryogenic fluids before water or when residual water freezes during sub-zero shutdowns. Repeated freeze-thaw cycles cause ice expansion, leading to plate deformation and cracking.
Improper installation or pressure surges can distort gaskets, reducing sealing pressure and causing leaks.
Chemically incompatible fluids penetrate gasket molecular structures, causing expansion. This leads to gasket displacement, leakage, and potential over-compression of plates, emphasizing the need for material compatibility.
A Hastelloy C-276 exchanger heating 15% sulfuric acid developed through-wall corrosion after 14 months. High steam temperatures increased acid corrosivity near outlet areas. Solution: Use more resistant materials or periodically invert plates.
Pure nickel plates cooling 32% caustic developed deposit-induced chloride corrosion after 53 months. Solution: Regular descaling and chloride control in cooling water.
SUS316 plates cracked under debris-induced chloride concentration and mechanical stress after 7 months. Solution: Improve filtration, cleaning frequency, or upgrade materials.
TP270 plates failed from cyclic stress caused by cooling water pressure fluctuations. Solution: Dampen pressure variations or use thicker plates with higher clamping force.
SUS316 copper-brazed plates ruptured from repeated freezing during sub-zero operation. Solution: Maintain refrigerant temperatures above 0°C.
NBR gaskets leaked from serpentine distortion caused by 0.5-1.0 MPa pressure cycling. Solution: Install pressure-stabilizing valves.
Extended shutdown with incompatible fluids caused gasket expansion and secondary sealing corrosion. Solution: Conduct material compatibility testing before selection.