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Preet
SinghAssociate
Professor
School of Materials
Science and Engineering
Ph.D., University of Newcastle Upon Tyne,
England, 1988
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Click here for
Preet Singh's Georgia Tech faculty page.
Click here for Corrosion and Materials Chemistry Research Laboratory home page.
Preet M. Singh obtained his
M.Tech. in Corrosion Science and Technology from the Indian Institute
of Technology, Bombay, in 1985 and his Ph.D. in Materials Engineering
from the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, England, in 1988. He received
Alcan International's Fellowship in 1988-90 to work on "Effects
of Low Melting Point Impurities on Slow Crack Growth in Al Alloys." From
1990 to 1996, he joined as a Senior Research Associate at Case Western
Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, working on various material and
corrosion related research projects, including Damage Accumulation
in Metal Matrix Composites (MMCs), Environmental Sensitive Fracture
of Al-alloys MMCs, and High Temperature Oxidation of Nb/Nb5Si3 Composites.
His research interests include Corrosion, Stress Corrosion
Cracking, Corrosion Fatigue, Microstructure/Property Relationships in
Alloys and Composite Materials.
Research Summary
Reliable performance of the materials used
to fabricate the plant equipment is extremely important for the manufacture
of a high quality product. Material selection is generally based on
the required material properties, low initial capital investment, and
minimum maintenance. Changing process parameters to improve the pulping
and papermaking processes often lead to higher corrosion susceptibilities
of the used materials. Moreover, with increase in capital cost, there
is pressure to extend the life of existing plants beyond their original
design life. Corrosion and Materials Engineers are playing a key role
in selecting, maintaining, and modifying materials for the industry's
changing needs. Corrosion and Materials research includes testing of
candidate alloys in the laboratory to understand the mechanisms of
material degradation and to develop a mitigation strategy. Further
field studies are done by exposing test coupons directly to specific
environments in the pulp and paper mills.
Main areas of concern to the pulp and paper
industry can be divided into two categories: aqueous corrosion and
high temperature corrosion. Most of the aqueous problems are a result
of the highly corrosive liquor streams found in the pulp mill. Corrosion
in white, green, and black liquor tanks and digesters needs a better
understanding for mitigation of corrosion-related problems. With mill
closure, the concentrations of various dissolved nonprocess elements
are expected to increase in various areas of pulping and papermaking
processes. Research at IPST in this field is aimed at understanding
the environmental changes in closed mills and their effect on the corrosion
and materials performance of the existing equipment as well as on new
materials.
One of the major research activities is related
to the corrosion problems in the kraft recovery boilers. Recovery boilers
are used to recover pulping chemicals and to raise steam by burning
the organic residues present in spent pulping liquors. There are a
range of problems associated with recovery boilers, e.g., high temperature
corrosion (oxidation or sulfidation), molten salt corrosion, and aqueous
corrosion due to condensed liquids in the cooler regions of the boiler.
Research is being carried out in all of the above-mentioned fields
at IPST. Composite tube cracking in the kraft recovery boilers is one
of the major unsolved problems in the industry. Collaborative research
at IPST in the field of stress corrosion cracking in washwater is directed
toward a better understanding and mitigation of this problem.
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