Positive Material Identification
Positive Material Identification
Identification
Harsha A
An Introduction to Positive Material
Identification Analysis
PMI (Positive Material Identification) testing is the analysis of materials to
determine the chemical composition of a metal or alloy at particular
(usually multiple) steps of alloy manufacturing or in-process alloy installation.
Knowing the exact composition and grade of an alloy enables suppliers,
plant workers, and other responsible parties in the chain of custody of
components to match alloy specifications that are chosen for their specific
properties such as heat resistance, corrosion resistance, durability, etc.
Having the right alloy in the right place is essential in places like petroleum
refineries and chemical plants, because the right alloy with the right
properties is often all that stands between a safe, efficient operation and
lost time and revenue.
Why PMI?
There are several things to consider in assessing whether a retroactive PMI testing program is necessary—and how to prioritize piping and components
to be tested—including but not limited to:
The likelihood of a material mix-up during previous project and maintenance activities
Fire potential
Toxicity
Temperature
Pressure
Previous experience of knowledge of information pertaining to inadvertent material substitutions or mix-ups at the site in question.
Gasket Materials
Sulfidation susceptibility
Maintenance Practices
How XRF works?
When electrons are knocked out of the orbits, this creates a vacancy where the electron
used to be. Since these vacancies make the atom unstable, they must immediately be
filled with other electrons.
The atom can fill these vacancies using electrons from higher orbits, so an electron from an
orbital shell further out from the nucleus can move down to fill a vacancy in an orbital shell
closer to the nucleus. When this happens, the electron loses some energy; this energy is the
fluorescent energy and it is detected by the detector in the XRF instrument.
Since each element has a unique set of fluorescent energies, the instrument can
determine what elements are present in the sample, as well as how much.
The instrument now knows the elemental composition of your stainless steel sample, and it
can reference this composition against an on-board library of known alloy grade
compositions and tell you what grade of stainless steel you have.
For example, if the result shows 17% Cr, 12% Ni, and 2% Mo, this is 316 SS, and the XRF alloy
tested will identify it as such.
XRF pics