The Metallurgy of High Strength Linepipe Steels

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
A. J. DeArdo
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
16
File Size:
537 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2005

Abstract

Linepipe steels have come a long way in the past forty years. In fact, modern, high strength steels for large diameter linepipe applications represent one of the seminal accomplishments in metallurgy of the past half-century. The synergy of advanced steelmaking, alloy design including microalloying, hot rolling, and interrupted accelerated cooling has led to the marvelous steels being used today. The drive for higher performance pipelines has been motivated by the energy sector of our global economy who wanted both higher throughput capacity, i.e., larger diameters and higher pressures, and lower material cost, i.e., relatively thinner gauge wall thicknesses. These requirements led to new steels with higher strengths, better toughness and improved weldability. The goal of this paper is to trace the evolution of linepipe steels from the X60 grades of the small diameter pipelines of the 1960s to the (X80 - X120) grades used in the large diameter pipelines of today. The metallurgical triumphs permitting this success story, e.g., clean steel practices, controlled rolling, microalloying with Nb, and using IAC to obtain low temperature transformation products, will be highlighted and discussed.
Citation

APA: A. J. DeArdo  (2005)  The Metallurgy of High Strength Linepipe Steels

MLA: A. J. DeArdo The Metallurgy of High Strength Linepipe Steels. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2005.

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