The process medium in a PTA oxidation unit is an acetic acid solution carrying terephthalic acid (TA) slurry. Typical conditions: acetic acid concentration 85–98%, operating temperature 180–200°C, pressure approximately 15–18 bar. This combination creates what we call a “four-way attack” on any control valve:
What we consistently find is that most seizure failures are not caused by poor valve quality alone. They result from compounding errors across selection, installation, and maintenance. Below we break down each root cause, ranked by frequency.
The field symptom is straightforward: valve position feedback drifts further and further from the control signal, actuator thrust reads normal, but the stem simply won’t move. When disassembled, a layer of white crystalline material is visible around the packing gland area.
Common misdiagnosis: Instrument teams frequently attribute this to insufficient actuator supply pressure or a faulty positioner. Of the 47 cases in our records, 11 were initially diagnosed as positioner faults by on-site I&E personnel. In every one of those 11 cases, the actual root cause was TA crystal buildup around the stem or packing.
Hot acetic acid slurry cools slightly across the temperature gradient at the packing gland, dropping below the TA crystallization point and depositing solids onto the stem. The problem accelerates when standard braided graphite packing rings are used (no anti-crystallization treatment), or when packing gland pre-load is uneven after a turnaround.
This failure mode develops after the valve has operated at low opening (5–15%) for an extended period. Slurry passes repeatedly through the restricted trim area; TA particles accumulate and compact in the narrow clearance between seat and plug until they form a cement-like mass. The result is a valve that can neither close fully nor open further.
“We arrived at a PTA plant where a feed control valve had been frozen at 12% opening for 72 hours. The process team had been manually managing flow through the bypass valve. On disassembly, the seat-plug gap was completely packed with compacted TA crystals.” — Guanya field service log, 2021
Single-seat globe valves are the primary culprit. Their tight seat clearance and internal dead zones make them particularly susceptible to bridging under high-solids slurry flow. A secondary contributor is the operating practice of holding a valve at low opening as a quasi-permanent setpoint rather than using it dynamically.
For TA slurry service, prioritize angle-pattern control valves or high-performance butterfly valves with short, straight flow paths and minimal dead zones. On the operations side, sustained running below 15% opening should trigger a valve Cv re-evaluation rather than be accepted as normal.
This issue appears most often during revamp projects or when equipment is replaced with locally sourced alternatives. Above 80% acetic acid concentration, the corrosion resistance of 316L stainless steel degrades sharply — particularly at temperatures above 150°C. We have investigated three cases where valve stems had developed severe pitting corrosion, leaving an irregular cross-section that physically jammed inside the packing gland.
Important note for procurement teams: Specifying “316L material” in a tender is insufficient for PTA acetic acid service above 80% concentration. The correct specification calls for Hastelloy C-276 or titanium alloy. The cost difference is 3–5× higher — but so is the cost of an unplanned shutdown. We have seen this exact trade-off made the wrong way, with predictable results.
Valve installation orientation has a significant impact on reliability in slurry service, yet it is consistently the most overlooked factor during construction and revamp. When a valve is installed horizontally with the stem pointing downward, TA crystals and solid particles settle by gravity into the lowest point of the packing gland, accelerating seizure.
For TA slurry service, vertical installation with the stem pointing upward is the preferred orientation. Where piping layout does not permit vertical installation, horizontal mounting should position the stem above the horizontal plane (between 10 o’clock and 2 o’clock). A removable drain/flush connection should be fitted at the lowest point of the stem area.
| Process Condition | Recommended Valve Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Solids content >20%, crystallization risk present | Angle-pattern control valve | Short straight flow path, good self-cleaning |
| Large bore (DN150+), low differential pressure | Triple-eccentric high-performance butterfly valve | Minimal body cavity, low solids accumulation |
| High control precision required, solids <15% | V-port ball valve + actuator | V-notch provides shearing self-cleaning action |
| Clean acetic acid, no solids | Single-seat cage control valve | Standard selection, no special consideration required |
Run through these 7 items for every control valve in PTA slurry service before a planned turnaround:
Everything above comes from our team’s own field records. Every plant has its own process nuances, and this article is not a substitute for a proper engineering review. However, it gives you a practical starting framework for a valve specification review or turnaround pre-inspection.
If your plant is seeing repeated valve seizure failures, we offer a on-site valve diagnostic service. Our team will assess your actual operating conditions and give you specific, actionable recommendations — not a generic product catalogue.
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