Rubber Linning Selection PDF
Rubber Linning Selection PDF
Rubber Linning Selection PDF
Elastomeric Linings
For Storage Tanks
GARY E KUJAWSKI, Chief Chemist
Tank Linings
Uniroyal Engineered Products
Mishiwaka, IN, and
FREDERICK HAINES, Vice President
Protective Coatings, Inc.
Fort Wayne, IN
Selecting
Elastomeric Linings
For Storage Tanks
GARY E. KUJAWSKI, Chief Chemist
Tank Linings
Uniroyal Engineered Products
Mishiwaka, IN, and
FREDERICK HAINES, Vice President
Protective Coatings, Inc.
Ft. Wayne, IN
INFORMATION NECESSARY
FOR TANK LINING SELECTION
Selection of the correct lining for a specific application requires that all available
details concerning the tank and other equipment to be lined, and the process to be
contained, be itemized. Some of the essential data follow:
Chemicals: the type of chemicals contained in the tank and their concentration; the
amount of impurities and contaminants, if any, potential chemical reactions
Abrasion: abrasive particle type, weight, and size; velocity of particle movement;
proportion of solids; nature of abrasive action (sliding or impinging)
Temperature: maximum, minimum, and operating temperatures; severity and spread
of temperature change; temperature cycle time
Pressure: maximum, minimum, and operating pressure or vacuum; pressure cycle time
Equipment: complete description of tank to be lined including physical design,
dimensions, and information on whether it is stationary or portable
Operating conditions: any other pertinent external and internal operating conditions
Product condition: levels of discoloration, contamination, odor, or taste allowed for
lading; Food and Drug Administration requirements, if any
Experience: Past experience under similar conditions such as lining compound used
and length of previous service life.
Armed with this information, plant engineers should be prepared to evaluate the
various types of linings that satisfy application requirements. Each of the parameters
listed should be analyzed separately so that the final lining selection takes into account
all of the specific needs of the application.
Plant engineers should not make the mistake of selecting a lining material because it
has performed well in applications similar to tank lining. For example, butyl rubber
that is used to provide abrasion resistance for coal-handling conveyor belts may not
provide the same abrasion resistance in a coal slurry tank.
And a lining material should not be selected on the basis of just one outstanding
physical property. For example, ethylene propylene rubber may be known to withstand 300 F temperatures, but it does not necessarily follow that a tank lining of this
material can withstand such a high temperature over a prolonged period. The specific
tank lining material must be compounded to be compatible with application and curing
procedures that could alter the properties of the cured material.
Shore A
durometer
reading
Upper
Temperature
limit, F
Thermal
shock
resistance
Resistance to
hydrocarbons
Typical uses
30 to 60
160
Excellent
Poor
80 to 85
180
Good
Fair
90 to 100
200
Poor
Fair
Flexible hard
natural rubber
90 to 100
212
Fair
Fair
Graphite loaded
hard rubber
95 to 100
212
Fair
Fair
Three-ply (soft,
hard, soft)
40 to 50
230
Excellent
Fair
Neoprene
40 to 70
230
Excellent
Very good
Nitrile
60 to 90
200
Excellent
Excellent
Butyl
50 to 75
225
Excellent
Fair
Chlorobutyl
40 to 60
200
Excellent
Fair
EPDM
40 to 60
180
Excellent
Poor
CSPE
50 to 70
210
Excellent
Good
CPE
50 to 75
230
Excellent
Good