Accelerated-Aging Screening Data for Polymer Liners in Oil and Gas Flexible Composite Pipes: A Communication
Pingyuan Xia, Tianyi Ma, Lin Lei, Qingxia Wang, Xiaomin Lu, Xiaolin Zhu, Yan Yan, Jiaqiao ZhangThis Communication reports limited engineering screening data on polymer liner candidates for flexible composite pipes used in oil and gas service. Three exposure conditions were considered: hydrothermal aging in superheated water, thermal-oxidative aging in dry air, and hydrocarbon-medium exposure. Superheated-water immersion for up to 1000 h, dry-air aging for 168 h, and 7-day hydrocarbon exposure were used to describe changes in tensile properties, Shore hardness, mass, and thickness. Complete replicate records were available only for the thermal-oxidative aging dataset; therefore, most hydrothermal and hydrocarbon-medium results are reported as descriptive summary data. In the recorded data, EPDM formulation CL-2-1 retained approximately 89% of its tensile strength after 1000 h in superheated water. Sample L showed a smaller mean tensile-strength decrease than Sample Z after 168 h at 150 °C in dry air. In the hydrocarbon-medium summary data, XL95A/05B-S1 showed lower mass increase and smaller tensile-strength and yield-stress decreases than PERT XRT70H across the tested temperature range. The Communication provides case-specific screening evidence and identifies the need for replicated testing, statistical analysis, longer aging series, and structural characterization before general material-selection or durability conclusions are made.