A Non-polluting Option Using Cathodic Protection for Hydrostatic Testing of Petroleum Tanks with Seawater

Oil storage tanks and derivatives must be evaluated by hydrostatic testing for leaks in sideways welds, possible cracks and failures that may have occurred during construction. Also in this test are observed defects and cracks in the concrete foundations that support the tank on the ground. The use of seawater as a fluid for hydrostatic testing in storage tank is economically attractive when the storage tanks are located near the sea. Due to its corrosive nature, seawater can cause damage to the internal surface of storage tanks. Generally, corrosion inhibitors and biocides are added to seawater in order to keep the corrosion rate under control. The disposal of water used in hydrostatic testing can represent an environmental problem whereas most corrosion inhibitors are toxic. Hydrostatic tests were run on bench scale tanks to investigate the efficiency of cathodic protection. These tests indicated that an aluminum anode (sacrificial anode) can efficiently replace corrosion inhibitors in storage tanks with the advantage that this corrosion protection system is not hazardous to the environment, as corrosion inhibitors can eventually be. The fixing of anodes in rubber floats and tubular modules represent a major innovation in the inner protection of tanks during the hydrostatic test with sea water.


Introduction
Industrial production processes, mainly chemical, petroleum and metallurgical, continue to exert strong pressure on the environment considering the inherent risks of their processes and equipment. The international media have highlighted a series of accidents involving spills, disposals, and contaminations with large environmental impact, including evacuations of entire communities on the basis of leaks of toxic gases and liquids, pollution, associated diseases and even deaths.
All these facts are intended to show those responsible for large industrial complexes the need to respect the integrity of equipment standards and directives on environmental preservation. In addition, it is essential to develop clean technologies and secure systems to avoid environmental disorders. Their goal is to make the planet safer and less polluted. Therefore, it is very important to articulate the integration of environmental agencies, public health, safety and industrialization with the larger society organized to establish standards and procedures in order to ensure real quality of life [1].
The objective of hydrostatic testing on storage tanks of petroleum, petroleum products, and other liquid products is to identify possible defects, cracks or construction failures that may occur during their assembly, operation or mechanical repairs and also assess the state of reinforced concrete foundations that support such tanks on the ground. Hydrostatic testing is universally known and accepted as a means to demonstrate the fitness of a pressurized component for service.
There are various existing international standards for the design of petroleum installations, including the design and construction of low pressure, low temperature tanks for the storage and handling of petroleum products.
The procedures adopted in hydrostatic testing are conducted in four stages filled with sea water for five days in each step. In the first step the filling is of 1/4 of the total volume, in the second half, the third represents 3/4 and finally the last comprises the filling up to 20 cm below the top edge.
It is important to note that hydrostatic testing with pressurized water contributes effectively to the security of the enterprise; however, the inspection of welds by specific techniques (ultrasound, x-rays, etc.) before and after hydrostatic testing are also fundamental in the industrial assembly. Still, it is important to note that hydrostatic testing should be performed at necessary and sufficient time intervals for a safe and correct response to the industrial assembly process.
In regions near the sea and lacking fresh water it is common to use seawater in the hydrostatic testing of pipelines, considering the runtime of the test and despite the significant possibility of generalized corrosion, pitting and corrosion by bacteria. To avoid or minimize problems with corrosion, corrosion inhibitors and biocides are commonly used. However, environmental agencies do not always allow this alternative, considering its toxicity in relation to environmental disposal of the test water in the sea itself. In most cases fresh water is the preferred choice to avoid the possibility of internal corrosion by seawater that can compromise the integrity of the enterprise according and cause a loss of thickness in the ducts [2]. Hydrostatic testing of large storage tanks of oil and oil derivatives located in marine regions preclude the use of fresh water because it becomes too expensive considering the large volume of water used in testing and the cost of pumping fresh water from reservoirs or transporting it on barges (service ship). Considering these facts, the low cost of seawater is quite attractive. However, experience shows that severely corrosive seawater can compromise the bottom and sides of a tank, as shown in several photos ( Figure 1) taken inside oil storage tanks. Secondary corrosion problems in seawater have been studied for many years, but despite much published information about the behavior of materials in seawater, failures still occur Roberge [3].
The corrosion rates of carbon steel range from 0.10 to 0.70 mm/year depending on several factors such as: oxygen, pH, contaminants, and macro and microorganisms. Some of these factors are interrelated and depend on physical, chemical, and biological variables such as depth, temperature, the presence of nearby rivers, contamination by industrial effluents and the availability of nutrients. The interaction between biological activity and steel performance is very important in seawater. Depending on the timing of the testing, macro fouling by barnacles and mussels can either be protective or result in accelerated corrosion depending on the area steel exposed and the extent of the accumulation of biological fouling [4].
The increase in the dissolved oxygen content caused by the pumping of seawater can also increase the rate of corrosion. In addition differential aeration corrosion may also occur, especially with inorganic and organic deposits, and weld and manufacturing defects.
In the past corrosion inhibitors based on chromates and amines [5,6] were used to protect the sides and bottoms of tanks from the aggressiveness of seawater during hydrostatic testing. However, these formulations were extremely toxic at all levels of use. Some current formulations based on sodium silicate and sodium sulfite associated with biodegradable biocides and dispersants are practically harmless to the environment. However, an innovative policy totally banning the addition of chemicals to seawater is inevitable in societies of the present and the future, because the sea is not an infinite system. There have been recommendations on avoiding or minimizing pollution of the seas since 1937, but only in 1958 did the Geneva Convention establish obligations on the part of member nations to prevent pollution caused by ships and subsea installations.
The idea of using a provisional system of cathodic protection with galvanic anodes, preferably aluminum, in hydrostatic tests with seawater is centred on two current priorities: protecting the bottom and sides of the tank and not contaminating the environment during disposal of the water.

Galvanic Cathodic Protection as an Anti-corrosion Technique not Harmful to the Environment
The galvanic cathodic protection mechanism shown in Figure 2 is not novel, because the use of aluminum and zinc anodes in protecting ships, pipelines, oil production platforms, tanks, piers and submarines is an accepted practice worldwide [7,8,9].
In cathodic protection of a carbon steel structure the flow of electrical current is supplied by the potential difference between the metallic surface (carbon steel) to be protected and an aluminum anode with a more negative potential. As the anode spontaneously wears out (Al -3 e -→ Al 3+ ) it provides electrons that flow to the cathode, rendering it more negative and consequently protecting it from harm from seawater. The novelty of the proposed internal protection of oil storage tanks during hydrostatic testing with seawater consists in the application of aluminum anodes either mounted on rubber floats (Figure 3, 4) or fixed in metallic modules ( Figure 5) in such a way as to distribute the protective current on the internal wall sides and bottom of the tank, thus enabling efficient protection against the harmful effects of seawater. In addition, when the hydrostatic testing is complete the water can be returned to the sea without any environmental impact, especially when compared with additions of corrosion inhibitors and other non-biodegradable additives. Figure 3 consists essentially of a rubber float coupled with an aluminum anode-containing rod as shown in the detail presented in Figure 4.
In installing the modular arrangement of carbon steel, it is threaded or welded and placed together with electrical insulators in the bottom of the tank, forming a modular unit in which the aluminum anodes are fixed in an orderly manner in order so that the protective current can flow constantly into the bottom and sides of the tank as shown in the diagram in Figure 5.

Laboratory Experiments
To demonstrate the use and good performance of cathodic protection with aluminum anodes two experiments were carried out. The first consisted of an acrylic container with a volume of 60 L and the other a small carbon steel tank with a capacity of 200 L.

Evaluation in the Laboratory of Carbon Steel Plates in Seawater
This assay consisted, essentially, in placing two carbon steel plates (20 cm × 10 cm) fixed in a holder and immersed in a transparent acrylic container with a capacity of 60 L of solution containing 3.5% (by weight) sodium chloride representing seawater, as shown in Figure 6. A carbon steel plate was connected to an aluminum anode while the other metallic plate was unprotected. Potential measurements were made twice daily to evaluate the cathodic protection. An agitator and an air bubbler were added to the system to generate oxygenation and a corrosive environment.   After 15, 20 and 30 days of hydrostatic testing, inspections were made on the internal walls and bottom of the tank but no significant corrosive process was found, indicating that the cathodic protection meets the operational needs of the hydrostatic test and does not cause any environmental impact.

Conclusions
On the basis of the above it is concluded that: • The laboratory tests carried out with aluminum anodes in seawater showed excellent protection of carbon steel; • The use of seawater instead of using fresh water in hydrostatic tests of pressurized tanks near the sea is much more advantageous in relation to the cost of transporting treated fresh water; • It is a fact that the corrosion caused by seawater is more intense than fresh water corrosion; • The provisional system of cathodic protection technology proposed with rubber floats attached to aluminum anodes or metallic modules with aluminum anodes represents a technological innovation and can be successfully used in hydrostatic testing with seawater in place of the addition of corrosion inhibitors, since it avoids corrosion and environmental damage; • The use of corrosion inhibitors in hydrostatic tests can itself engender environmental contamination unless the formulations are biodegradable or innocuous to the environment; • Finally, whereas the majority of corrosion inhibitors is toxic, this technology represents an advance in environmental protection.