Aggressive ammonium chloride corrosion often occurs:
A.
When the salts precipitate from high-temperature streams as they cool.
B.
In the absence of a free water phase.
C.
When excess water washing dissolves too much ammonium chloride.
D.
When dry salts are exposed to a small amount of free water.
The Answer Is:
D
This question includes an explanation.
Explanation:
According to API RP 571:
“Ammonium chloride corrosion is most aggressive when dry salts are exposed to a small amount of free water. This condition allows the formation of a concentrated acidic aqueous solution, which is highly corrosive to carbon steel.”
“The corrosion mechanism is activated especially during startup and shutdown when condensation may occur on salt deposits.”
(Reference: API RP 571, Section 4.3.3.1 – Ammonium Chloride Corrosion)
Hence, while salt deposition begins as temperatures drop, the most aggressive corrosion happens when water is introduced to dry salt, making option D correct.
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