Comprehensive and Detailed Explanation From Exact Extract:
Naphthenic Acid Corrosion (NAC) occurs in high-temperature refinery streams (typically 450–750 °F / 230–400 °C) containing organic acids. According to API RP 571, NAC is particularly aggressive toward carbon steels and low-alloy steels, and resistance improves with increasing chromium and molybdenum content, but is best with titanium.
Titanium exhibits exceptional resistance to NAC due to the formation of a stable, protective oxide film that is not attacked by naphthenic acids. API RP 571 identifies titanium as one of the most resistant materials available for severe NAC environments.
Why the other options are less suitable:
Option B (9 Cr-1 Mo steel) has limited resistance and is still susceptible at higher TAN and velocities.
Option C (317 stainless steel) offers improved resistance but can still experience attack under severe NAC conditions.
Option D (321 stainless steel) has lower molybdenum content than 317 SS, making it less resistant.
API RP 571 explicitly notes that titanium provides superior resistance compared to stainless steels and Cr-Mo alloys in NAC service.
Referenced Documents (Study Basis):
API RP 571 – Section on Naphthenic Acid Corrosion
API Corrosion and Materials Selection Study Guide
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