Cat:Stainless Steel Sectional Water Tank
Stainless steel sectional fire water tanks are made of 304 stainless steel and are widely used in residential, office buildings, hotels, daily life, f...
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FRP piping is pipe made from fiberglass-reinforced plastic, built by combining glass fiber reinforcement with a thermosetting resin matrix such as polyester, vinyl ester, or epoxy. The glass fibers carry the structural load while the resin binds the fibers together and resists chemical attack, giving the finished pipe both mechanical strength and corrosion resistance that metal pipe cannot match in aggressive environments.
FRP pipes (sometimes called GRP, for glass-reinforced plastic) are widely used to move corrosive chemicals, seawater, wastewater, and process fluids in industries where carbon steel would corrode within months and PVC would lack the pressure or temperature rating needed.
FRP pipe is produced using one of three main processes, each suited to different diameters and pressure requirements. Filament winding is the most common method for industrial process piping because it allows precise control over fiber orientation and wall thickness.
FRP piping sits between metal and thermoplastic pipe in terms of strength, but it surpasses both in chemical resistance per unit weight. A typical FRP pipe has a density of about 1.8 to 2.1 g/cm³, compared with 7.85 g/cm³ for carbon steel, which is the main reason FRP installations need lighter supports and smaller lifting equipment.
| Property | FRP Pipe | Carbon Steel | PVC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Corrosion resistance | Excellent | Poor without lining | Good |
| Typical temp. limit | Up to 200°F (93°C) | Over 800°F (427°C) | Up to 140°F (60°C) |
| Relative weight | Low (~1/4 of steel) | High | Low |
| Max practical diameter | 144 inches | Very large | 48 inches |
The resin used in an FRP pipe determines its chemical compatibility and temperature limit far more than the glass fiber does. Vinyl ester resin handles a broader range of acids and oxidizers than standard polyester, which is why it dominates chemical processing applications despite costing more.
| Resin Type | Max Temp. | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|
| Isophthalic polyester | 160°F (71°C) | Water, mild chemicals, wastewater |
| Vinyl ester | 200°F (93°C) | Acids, bleach, oxidizing chemicals |
| Epoxy | 250°F (121°C) | High-temperature oil and gas service |
FRP pipe is specified wherever fluid corrosivity or scale makes metal pipe impractical to maintain. Flue gas desulfurization (FGD) systems at coal-fired power plants are one of the largest single applications, often using FRP duct and piping in diameters exceeding 100 inches to carry hot, acidic scrubber slurry.
FRP pipe is manufactured across an unusually wide size range compared to most piping materials, from small-diameter lab drain lines up to large municipal water mains. Standard diameters run from 1 inch to 144 inches, with pressure ratings commonly available up to 300 psi for industrial process lines.
Because FRP cannot be welded like steel, joining methods rely on adhesive bonding, mechanical coupling, or lamination. Adhesive-bonded bell-and-spigot joints are the most common method for process piping, offering a fully sealed, corrosion-resistant connection without metal hardware in the wetted path.
FRP piping is not a universal replacement for metal pipe, and ignoring its limits leads to premature failure. Unprotected resin degrades under prolonged UV exposure, so outdoor installations typically need a UV-inhibited topcoat or paint finish.
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