Sciencemadness Discussion Board

pipe thread sealing

Magpie - 10-8-2010 at 12:49

I have built a 350mL autoclave and am attempting to hydrostatically pressure test it using DOT 3 brake fluid. This mixture of glycols is one of the most penetrating fluids I have ever seen.

I'm attempting to seal a 1/4" NPT connection. My first choice of a thread sealant (Rector Seal No. 7) was a miserable failure. After getting this black gunk cleaned out of the threads I tried Ace's PTE sealant. This has sealed every joint except one. When I bring the pressure up to 500 psi it starts leaking after a few seconds. I have not tried a combination of the Ace sealant and PTFE tape, but am thinking about it.

I had so many leaks on the TI thermowell and PI tree that I had them silver soldered. I'm really getting tired of trying to seal this thing up. At 500 psi all other connections, including the vessel flange head, are holding pressure.

Any recommendations or discussion will be greatly appreciated.

watson.fawkes - 10-8-2010 at 13:11

Quote: Originally posted by Magpie  
I'm attempting to seal a 1/4" NPT connection.
I wish I could be more definitive about it, but I believe that higher-pressure systems like this one are often built with threads of a higher class than ordinary plumbing fittings. So I'd first try re-threading your parts. This isn't much more than chasing the threads with the appropriate tap and die. The goal is to get thread shapes that more closely match. In particular, you should be able to get sharper crests and roots in the thread profile. All this should make your sealants work better.

gardenvariety - 10-8-2010 at 13:15

Try finer threads, and absolutely use some PTFE tape. Two turns are best, more is a waste and sometimes a cause for leaks.

Magpie - 10-8-2010 at 13:49

@watson:

The female threads are brand new so I don't see much point in chasing them. But that might do the male threads some good.

@garden:

I would love to have finer threads on the system but it's too late now. Every connection except the two that must be threaded have been sealed with silver solder, ie, the fittings are welded in place.

I've learned that there are threads called NPTF for NPT Fuel. They would be better as there is no spiral gap at the thread root-peak interface. The peaks deform into and fill the root when tightened. But it's too late for those also.

The leaking connection is for a fill pipe and will be capped when in actual use. Right now it connects to the pressurization device.

The other 1/4" NPT connection is for a PI that will be installed later for actual use of the autoclave. This connection now has a plug in it and is holding pressure with the ACE PTE dope.

watson.fawkes - 10-8-2010 at 14:21

Quote: Originally posted by Magpie  
The female threads are brand new so I don't see much point in chasing them. But that might do the male threads some good.
Your manual pipe thread tap may well cut the roots in the female thread deeper than originally manufactured. The point I'm making is that the tolerances on a mass produced part are looser than you can cut them manually, using greater care and sharper tooling.

As a backup, you might consider silver-soldering on a bolted flange fitting and using that kind of connection rather than screw threads.

Magpie - 10-8-2010 at 17:07

Quote: Originally posted by watson.fawkes  
Your manual pipe thread tap may well cut the roots in the female thread deeper than originally manufactured. The point I'm making is that the tolerances on a mass produced part are looser than you can cut them manually, using greater care and sharper tooling.

As a backup, you might consider silver-soldering on a bolted flange fitting and using that kind of connection rather than screw threads.


I think I see what you are driving at. By using a tap and die I would cut new threads for both pieces of hopefully sharper definition. This would make just a small difference in the take-up, but the length of thread engagement would be the same. Is this correct?

Welding on a flange would work but be a PITA. Welding on a compression fitting might be easier/cheaper. I'm finding that compression fittings can be made leak tight much easier than threaded fittings.

I'm just hoping that the PI threaded joint will hold when I remove the plug and install the PI. I don't think it would be advisable to weld anything onto the bourdon pressure guage.

Ozone - 10-8-2010 at 17:13

I have had good results with PTFE tape, alone. These joints (swagelock) did not leak at 15k psi (OK, once it blew the tube out of the ferule/nut fitting and mangled it...but it did not leak beforehand).

Man, that will blow out more than the tube when it happens!

Best of luck,

O3

watson.fawkes - 10-8-2010 at 18:11

Quote: Originally posted by Magpie  
By using a tap and die I would cut new threads for both pieces of hopefully sharper definition. This would make just a small difference in the take-up, but the length of thread engagement would be the same.
As I understand you, yes. The male would screw in a little further, but since these are pipe threads the depth of contact is the same.

What's different though, is the total spiral-shaped volume between the male and female threads. When you cut the threads to tighter tolerances, that volume goes down. Because the length of that cavity is pretty constant, what you've done is to decrease the effective size of the orifice that the thread mating makes. The smaller that average cross-section, the higher the contribution that frictional forces contribute to flow rate (surface/volume ratio), all of which mean that your sealants have less work to do. Once you get below the threshold (whatever it be), your sealant holds perfectly.

The whole point of so-called dry-fit pipe threads is that the geometric match is good enough that the working fluid being contained acts as its own sealant.

Contrabasso - 11-8-2010 at 00:14

Several pipe seal types don't actually seal at the threads they seal on the tip. The pipe end is cut to fit the end of the female threaded socket perfectly, the nut just holds it all together.

Have you a test schedule for your vessel? 1/ you don't want to test it to destruction as you only have the one, but 2/ you need to test it within it's elastic limit or there will be a permanent shape change.

What working pressure are you anticipating? What safety factor have you calculated into the design. You ARE going to fit safety and blowout valves I trust so that accidental overpressure releases somewhere safely. You don't want steam spraying near you when you have to drop pressure anytime

I've seen a diver's air cylinder that was tested to destruction hydraulically -the side split all its length (IIRC 4x rated pressure) the mess there is just sprayed oil. If there is a failure with gas inside it really is like a bomb going off with heavy shrapnel going all ways.

Mr. Wizard - 11-8-2010 at 07:44

Why not convert the connections to the same used for hydraulic brakes? IIRC the pressure on a normal brake system is around 900psi. You won't be relying on the semi plastic sealants to fill the gaps in the threads, but will be relying on metal surfaces mechanically held together.

I would second Contrabasso's caution about making sure there is NO gas in the system when pressure testing. Gas can store energy when being pumped up, and will release it catastrophically.

densest - 11-8-2010 at 08:16

@watson.fawkes - according to "Machinery's Handbook", NPTF (F=fuel) threads are designed such that the crests of the threads deform when fully engaged. That is supposed to form (at least part of) the seal.

@contrabasso - that's a good idea. There are several families of compression fittings for copper pipe/tubing & stainless steel tubing. There are two major families I've seen: one requires flaring the end of the tubing/pipe and compresses that against a corresponding tapered end. The other compresses a metal or plastic ferrule around the diameter of the tubing. That family is also used for plastic tubing (often with a supporting insert inside the tubing.

Both families can be purchased (at least in the USA) for working pressures up to 3000 psi (200+ bar) or more. Correspondingly strong tubing can be purchased - it's not horribly expensive as long as the diameter is small.

franklyn - 11-8-2010 at 08:54

No need to re-invent the solution , selct from Permatex , Loctite or Hercules
http://www.accentshopping.com/product.asp?P_ID=148706
Before application threads must be cleaner than merely wiping.
Google " High Pressure " " Thread Sealant "
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&q=%22hi...

.

Magpie - 11-8-2010 at 16:26

Today I chased the pipe threads, filled the hose with oil, and ran another pressure test. It held at 500 psi for about a minute before leaking at the same fitting. It's a fair amount of work to set up for a test as it's a pain getting all the air out of the connecting hose. But apparently my technique is successful as I only have to take a few turns on my pressurization device to start building pressure rapidly.

Here's a couple pictures of the autoclave during testing. The first shows the male thread of the leak point. The second shows the connection to the pressurization device and the leaked fluid.

Contrabasso, I appreciate your questions about the autoclave design, with my safety in mind: The body of the autoclave is a capped 2.5" schedule 80 mild steel pipe, welded construction. The flanges are "300 lb" class, mild steel. I can't find my calculations right now but, using a conservative tensile strength for the steel I calculated a burst pressure in the 3-4000 psi range. I plan to hydrostatically test the autoclave at 1500 psi, and limit myself to 500 psi during actual use. I should put a pressure relief device on it, and could install it on the fill pipe instead of a cap.

Edit1: I found my calculations. Using Barlow's formula and assuming a minimum yield strength of 30,000 psi for pipe steel, I calculate a burst pressure of 5760 psi.

male threads.JPG - 47kB leaking fitting.JPG - 47kB

[Edited on 12-8-2010 by Magpie]

watson.fawkes - 11-8-2010 at 17:14

Quote: Originally posted by Magpie  
Today I chased the pipe threads, filled the hose with oil, and ran another pressure test. It held at 500 psi for about a minute before leaking at the same fitting.
My immediate thought is that the brass female fitting is deforming (by expanding) and generating a spiral leak. What's the material of the male thread? It's conceivable that if the materials have a different enough modulus, that the outer one is expanding more than the inner one with respect to pressure.

My other thought, just looking at the length of the threads, is that it might be bottoming out in the female side before the threads are fully engaged.

Also, the crests on the male threads don't look particularly sharp, although it's kind of hard to tell from the photo.

I should also mention that I don't have particular confidence that any of these remarks get to the point of the problem.

Magpie - 11-8-2010 at 17:45

Quote: Originally posted by watson.fawkes  
My immediate thought is that the brass female fitting is deforming (by expanding) and generating a spiral leak. What's the material of the male thread? It's conceivable that if the materials have a different enough modulus, that the outer one is expanding more than the inner one with respect to pressure.


The male and female pieces are made of mild steel. The female looks like brass as it has a dichromate plating.

Quote: Originally posted by watson.fawkes  

My other thought, just looking at the length of the threads, is that it might be bottoming out in the female side before the threads are fully engaged.


That's a possibility.

Quote: Originally posted by watson.fawkes  

Also, the crests on the male threads don't look particularly sharp, although it's kind of hard to tell from the photo.


They're not. I meant to mention that when I was chasing the male threads I couldn't go very far down due to the shoulder on the tee. So I didn't cut much metal.



merrlin - 11-8-2010 at 19:14

Quote: Originally posted by Magpie  
Quote: Originally posted by watson.fawkes  

Quote: Originally posted by watson.fawkes  

My other thought, just looking at the length of the threads, is that it might be bottoming out in the female side before the threads are fully engaged.


That's a possibility.






The nominal hand-tight engagement length for a 1/4 NPT thread is about 1/4", so it looks like bottoming out is a good bet. If you scuff the face of the male fitting with a fine grit abrasive paper and assemble it without a sealant, you should be able to see the contact area if it is bottoming out.

Magpie - 11-8-2010 at 20:06

from merrlin:

Quote:

The nominal hand-tight engagement length for a 1/4 NPT thread is about 1/4", so it looks like bottoming out is a good bet. If you scuff the face of the male fitting with a fine grit abrasive paper and assemble it without a sealant, you should be able to see the contact area if it is bottoming out.


My hand tight take-up is about 8mm, so that's close to 1/4". This took 3.5 turns, which I believe is nominal. But the strange thing is that I would only get 1 turn with the wrench when I last assembled it with the sealant. I quit when I felt the threads start to deform. But what I have read is that you should get 3 turns with the wrench.

I'm not sure I understand what you are saying about scuffing the face with abrasive paper. Please explain this in more detail.

watson.fawkes - 11-8-2010 at 20:12

If the fitting is bottoming out, the easiest thing to do is to just file down the male piece by a thread pitch or two. And by "file", I really mean "angle grinder".

Magpie - 11-8-2010 at 20:27

Quote: Originally posted by watson.fawkes  
If the fitting is bottoming out, the easiest thing to do is to just file down the male piece by a thread pitch or two. And by "file", I really mean "angle grinder".


If, by "bottoming out" you mean that the end of male is hitting the bottom of the female, that's definitely not happening. The female will take 17mm, and I'm only getting about 10-11 mm of take-up of the male. You can see how much excess male thread there is in the picture of the assembly. The threads in the female go very deep into the fitting.

Does the fact that I can only get 1 wrench turn seem strange to you?

watson.fawkes - 11-8-2010 at 21:00

Quote: Originally posted by Magpie  
Does the fact that I can only get 1 wrench turn seem strange to you?
Yes. Since you've chased the threads, it's likely not a burr interfering. In my experience with tapered threads, there's a first point where there's that metal-yielding feeling, but that's OK, since it's the taper engagement. Around 3-4 turns later, there's a second version of it that kicks in, and that's the one not to go past. I believe the first one is the motion of all the imperfections in the first pair of screw faces to mate. The second one seems like it's the second pair of faces, and this time there's no where for the metal to go.

merrlin - 12-8-2010 at 12:56

Quote: Originally posted by Magpie  
from merrlin:

Quote:

The nominal hand-tight engagement length for a 1/4 NPT thread is about 1/4", so it looks like bottoming out is a good bet. If you scuff the face of the male fitting with a fine grit abrasive paper and assemble it without a sealant, you should be able to see the contact area if it is bottoming out.


My hand tight take-up is about 8mm, so that's close to 1/4". This took 3.5 turns, which I believe is nominal. But the strange thing is that I would only get 1 turn with the wrench when I last assembled it with the sealant. I quit when I felt the threads start to deform. But what I have read is that you should get 3 turns with the wrench.

I'm not sure I understand what you are saying about scuffing the face with abrasive paper. Please explain this in more detail.


Using #600 grit silicon carbide paper will produce a fairly uniform matte finish consisting of shallow scratches from the abrasive grains. Unless the male fitting is much harder than the female fitting, the shear contact upon bottoming out will smear the scratch pattern and provide a visual contrast.

If the fitting is not bottoming out and you are getting only one turn with a wrench, you could be hanging up on the last few threads at the large diameter end of the taper on the male fitting. These threads can be too shallow due to die chamfer.

Magpie - 12-8-2010 at 19:08

Thanks, merrlin.

I rechased both threads, again not being able to do the male threads properly because of the shoulder on the tee. I redoped then began screwing on the female fitting. Again 3-4 turns on hand tightening, and only one turn possible with the wrench. I used a 12" crescent wrench to stabilize the tee and an 8" box wrench on the female fitting. I tightened it as much as I could, likely much more torque than specification. Again the pressure test at 500 psi failed.

I'm convinced there is something wrong with the male or female threads, or both. I'm not sure how to proceed from here. One possibility is to weld on a coupling then a nipple having verified good male threads. Or better yet, figure out how to have a compression fitting on the bitter end.

densest - 12-8-2010 at 21:04

I'm not sure I understand "3-4 turns on hand tightening, and only 1 turn possible on the wrench". Does that mean you can hand tighten 3-4 turns and then can only go 1 turn more?

Where did you get the fittings? McMaster-Carr? Local plumbing supply?

Can you put something on the threads to reveal the engagement (like some Dykem blue?)

Is there any reason to use a (what looks like) 1/4" pipe for your high pressure area? Could some 1/8" do? Could you move the 1/4-1/8 reducer to the main pipe and use a 1/8" tee? The threads are finer and should work better.

There are fittings available for high pressure gases (Harris, the regulator maker comes to mind) rated over 3000 psi which I've found are made to close tolerances. They go together quite cleanly.





Magpie - 13-8-2010 at 12:06

Quote: Originally posted by densest  
I'm not sure I understand "3-4 turns on hand tightening, and only 1 turn possible on the wrench". Does that mean you can hand tighten 3-4 turns and then can only go 1 turn more?

Where did you get the fittings? McMaster-Carr? Local plumbing supply?

Can you put something on the threads to reveal the engagement (like some Dykem blue?)

Is there any reason to use a (what looks like) 1/4" pipe for your high pressure area? Could some 1/8" do? Could you move the 1/4-1/8 reducer to the main pipe and use a 1/8" tee? The threads are finer and should work better.

There are fittings available for high pressure gases (Harris, the regulator maker comes to mind) rated over 3000 psi which I've found are made to close tolerances. They go together quite cleanly.



*Yes.

*Fittings are Tompkins or Brenan from a local high pressure hydraulic hose and fittings supplier.

*I might be able to do this but I don't see how it will lead to solving my problem.

*The reason is I'm welded in all the way to the 300lb flange head. I'd prefer to find a solution that works with what I have.

*The fittings I have are, no doubt, made in China. Using Harris, Parker, or Swagelok might be a step in the right direction.

merrlin - 13-8-2010 at 12:56

Quote: Originally posted by Magpie  
Thanks, merrlin.

I rechased both threads, again not being able to do the male threads properly because of the shoulder on the tee. I redoped then began screwing on the female fitting. Again 3-4 turns on hand tightening, and only one turn possible with the wrench. I used a 12" crescent wrench to stabilize the tee and an 8" box wrench on the female fitting. I tightened it as much as I could, likely much more torque than specification. Again the pressure test at 500 psi failed.

I'm convinced there is something wrong with the male or female threads, or both. I'm not sure how to proceed from here. One possibility is to weld on a coupling then a nipple having verified good male threads. Or better yet, figure out how to have a compression fitting on the bitter end.


At this point I would be inclined to epoxy a stainless 1/4NPT coupling to the male stub at the tee. Before epoxying the coupling, I would plug the coupling and attach it to the hose with PTFE tape and pressure test it. That way you can verify the coupling before epoxying it to your existing plumbing.

Magpie - 13-8-2010 at 13:14

Quote: Originally posted by merrlin  

At this point I would be inclined to epoxy a stainless 1/4NPT coupling to the male stub at the tee. Before epoxying the coupling, I would plug the coupling and attach it to the hose with PTFE tape and pressure test it. That way you can verify the coupling before epoxying it to your existing plumbing.


I'm thinking along these lines myself. Only I would use silver solder instead of epoxy as I don't want the maximum service temperature to be limited anymore than necessary. Although using the solder would be a lot more work and expense than would be the epoxy.

Another advantage to the coupling will be the female threads. These are needed for the pressure relief device that will form the "plug" in service.

Magpie - 18-8-2010 at 12:26

Strongly suspecting bad threads at the tee/FNPT-JIC connection I carried out the test proposed by merrlin and myself. That is, the female JIC on the hose end was connected to a nipple (NPT/JIC), NPT coupling, and plug as shown below. This system was then brought up to 1500 psig. All 9 threaded connections held.

Pressure would slowly drop off as various compression fittings were leaking slightly at these higher pressures. They were tightened and the leaks stopped. Finally a threaded connection at a brass pressure gage did start slowly leaking. I terminated the test at this point.

I now feel that if the NPT coupling is epoxied or silver soldered to the 1/4" MNPT at the tee on the autoclave (see picture) I will be able to proceed with hydrostatic testing of the autoclave itself to 1500 psig.

Thanks to all those contributing suggestions to help me seal this system.

coupling test.jpg - 114kB

[Edited on 18-8-2010 by Magpie]

[Edited on 18-8-2010 by Magpie]

Magpie - 18-9-2010 at 10:39

Quote: Originally posted by Magpie  

I now feel that if the NPT coupling is epoxied or silver soldered to the 1/4" MNPT at the tee on the autoclave (see picture) I will be able to proceed with hydrostatic testing of the autoclave itself to 1500 psig.


This is a followup to the leak that I could not stop before on the autoclave tree.

I did have a coupling silver-soldered to what I suspected were bad male threads on the tee. Today I pressure tested the system again. It held 1500 psig for 15 minutes with no leaks. So I now consider the autoclave to have successfully passed its hydrostatic pressure test.

As always comments, suggestions, and questions are welcomed.



autoclave tree.JPG - 40kBautoclave hydrostatic test pressure.JPG - 57kB

Eclectic - 18-9-2010 at 12:56

I'd go with silver solder every time...

Awww...come on...I built an autoclave designed for 50,000 psi

5 inch diameter 316+ cold rolled, 2" bore...


17-4 ph alloy is widely used in Autoclave Engineers high pressure fittings.

[Edited on 9-18-2010 by Eclectic]

Magpie - 18-9-2010 at 13:06

Let's see it....and your pressure test. :D

What is 17-4 ph alloy? And how does it compare in cost and availability to SS316 fittings?

[Edited on 18-9-2010 by Magpie]

watson.fawkes - 18-9-2010 at 13:57

Quote: Originally posted by Magpie  
What is 17-4 ph alloy?
http://www.specialtysteelsupply.com/17-4ph-stainless-steel.php
http://www.sandmeyersteel.com/17-4PH.html

denatured - 18-9-2010 at 17:24

Have you tried using flax fibers w/ PTFE? it is very strong. like this and this.

Eclectic - 18-9-2010 at 17:45

http://www.autoclaveengineers.com/products/pressure_vessels/...

AE Style Closure. I can take photo of closure, alas, not body.
Pressure test would have required a 100 ton hydraulic press and special 1/2 sq inch piston modified plug

Patent US2424449

Magpie - 18-9-2010 at 17:49

Flax? That's an interesting suggestion. But my joints are now holding with just the Ace PTE joint sealing compound.

If your threads aren't right I'm now convinced the joint will leak no matter what sealant you use. And if your threads are really great you may not even need one. When you tighten to deformation you are really getting a compression seal. But the root-to-peak spiral still must be sealed, I suppose.


@Eclectic
OK, I believe you. Nice equipment, but likely nearly as expensive as Parr.

[Edited on 19-9-2010 by Magpie]

[Edited on 19-9-2010 by Magpie]

Eclectic - 18-9-2010 at 17:51

Your pressure range would likely be happier using hydraulic line 10,000 psi designed fittings, but you seem to have it working ok using much cheaper standard plumbing.

Magpie - 18-9-2010 at 18:00

Quote: Originally posted by Eclectic  
Your pressure range would likely be happier using hydraulic line 10,000 psi designed fittings, but you seem to have it working ok using much cheaper standard plumbing.


Those are hydraulic fittings. Some have JIC compression ends and some have NPT ends.

denatured - 20-9-2010 at 21:38

Magpie: before PTFE appeared, it was widely used by plumbers (ex). even if your threads are great, you need some sealing, even if it is a thin layer.

Magpie - 21-9-2010 at 08:25

Quote: Originally posted by denatured  
Magpie: before PTFE appeared, it was widely used by plumbers (ex). even if your threads are great, you need some sealing, even if it is a thin layer.


Yes, I agree. With the NPT design some sealant is required as nicely explained by watson upthread.

Flax is an interesting approach. Perhaps shredded dental floss would also work in a like manner. For general household water plumbing I have always used either Rectorseal No. 7, Ace PTE, or Teflon tape. If the threads are good they all seem to work satisfactorily.

Rectorseal No. 7 has been the industrial favorite for decades in the US. Mine was given to me by a millwright in a paper mill where I once worked.

SWilkin676 - 23-9-2010 at 03:11

I'm curious how ptfe will hold up under pressure and high temp. I thought it had a relatively low temperature threshold compared to the kind of things chemists (especially mad ones) like to do.

I also thought JIC & NPT aren't meant to go together. I've learned the hard way the subtle differences between the threading types - you can sometimes get it part way but anything else you damage the threads to accomplish because of the differences in pitch angles etc.

http://www.malonespecialtyinc.com/tech.htm

We got introduced to the fun of different types of plumbing fittings when we got a leybold vacuum pump with BSP fittings. I have a brazed plate heat exchanger I can't play with til I get ahold of 4 ISO 1" fittings. Ugh.


Magpie - 23-9-2010 at 07:29

Quote: Originally posted by SWilkin676  
I'm curious how ptfe will hold up under pressure and high temp. I thought it had a relatively low temperature threshold compared to the kind of things chemists (especially mad ones) like to do.

I also thought JIC & NPT aren't meant to go together. I've learned the hard way the subtle differences between the threading types - you can sometimes get it part way but anything else you damage the threads to accomplish because of the differences in pitch angles etc.


As you say organic materials are usually limited to about 300C if not less, and I will be limited to applications below those temperatures.

When I said that some ends are JIC and some are NPT I did not mean to imply that I was mating the two.