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OVERVIEW

The Materials Properties Council was established in 1966 in response to the growing need for valid data on the engineering properties of metals. Founded by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, ASM International, ASTM and the Engineering Foundation and supported by industry, technical organizations, codes and standards developers, and government agencies, MPC has compiled a record of notable successes.

As one of the few organizations in the world dedicated to industrial cooperation on materials performance, MPC is recognized by, and receives support from, companies headquartered in Europe, Asia, South America, and the Middle East, as well as the United States and Canada.

GOALS

  • To serve as an international focus identifying major needs for reliable data on the engineering properties and performance of materials
  • To consider, plan, and direct programs for collecting and evaluating and, as necessary, generating the needed data
  • To arrange for making the resulting data and analyses available promptly via reports, publications, correspondence, or other means
  • To keep informed of and to utilize the results of related activities, both national and international, in order to avoid duplication of effort

Dedicated to providing industry with the best technology and the best data that can be obtained on the properties of materials to help meet today's most advanced concepts in design and service, life assessment, fitness-for-service, and reliability and safety

Since 1966, MPC has responded to the needs of industry and the growth of technology. Its sound approach to problem solving, and adherence to the principles of its founding mandate have never varied: MPC develops the technical basis for making decisions regarding materials performance. To succeed on a consistent basis, MPC assembles expert talent, fully defines the problem at hand, sets goals, directs the required research, validates the results, and effectively disseminates its developments to industry and codes and standards organizations for implementation.

STRUCTURE

The structure of the Materials Properties Council is streamlined to provide the expertise and fluidity needed to ensure the success of the programs that are conducted under the auspices of MPC.

Task Groups and Ad Hoc Committees are organized to work on particular programs; these groups report through the appropriate Subcommittees during the course of the programs and can be disbanded when projects are completed.

The MPC Committee members consist of distinguished engineers and scientists who represent all facets of the materials producing, -fabricating, and -using organizations and those from related fields, as required by a specific project. The expertise, time, and effort that they contribute are vital to the Council. They

  • facilitate the gathering of existing data
  • assess what has already been done in the field to avoid duplication of effort
  • provide materials and samples
  • choose test facilities, analysts, or consultants on the basis of competitive bids
  • plan and monitor the programs conducted by the chosen contractors
  • evaluate the results in the light of their cumulative expertise
  • critique and approve all reports for dissemination

MPC projects originate from requests made by industry in general as well as issues raised by individual companies or codes and standards developers. Whatever the source, MPC volunteer participants

  • define the scope of work
  • identify priorities
  • set goals
  • organize task groups or ad hoc committees
  • develop RFP's
  • contribute or raise funds to cover the costs of the particular programs
  • establish schedules
  • monitor and review the data collected
  • assure that objectives are met
  • assist in the dissemination of results in a useful and unbiased manner whether in publications or at seminars or workshops

The Council's procedures reflect the fact that the data and results that MPC generates are used in the public sector where safety, reliability, and environmental actors are of vital concern. Accordingly, the recommendations that the Council makes to industry and codes and standards developers are reviewed rigorously and before being released are applied to test cases to assure their validity.

RESULTS AND RETURNS

The Materials Properties Council is a not-for-profit scientific and technical corporation that is supported by industry, utilities, materials producers, fabricators, codes and standards developers, and related technical organizations.

The support given to MPC is both technical and financial. Technical support normally consists of committee participation. Financial support is general or assigned:

  • general funds support operations such as ongoing data collection, routine property studies, developmental activities, symposia, and workshops
  • assigned funds support projects and testing programs of interest to a specific company or a group of companies or organizations. Sponsors, i.e., supporters of specific projects, have access to the work in progress on an ongoing basis.

The success that MPC has had in organizing collaborative research is due to the active participation of industry and research experts and the pooling of funds provided by many sources. This ensures that MPC can leverage talent, funds, and time to direct programs that are technologically at the cutting edge and economically sound.

By organizing and managing collaborative research and by leveraging funding, MPC has produced results that have been of mutual interest and benefit to a variety of users, leading to further studies which have resulted in even greater technological progress and savings. Over the years, the expenditures for MPC programs have exceeded the equivalent of 100 million dollars in today’s terms, but the value of the work to industry has been many times greater.

The benefits realized by supporters of MPC include

  • direct access to the results and data generated by MPC programs, the latest technology, and the best data on material properties and performance
  • the opportunity to participate in decision-making, in defining the problems, and in prioritizing the needs of today's technical community
  • the opportunity to share expertise and experience
  • the opportunity to control expenditures and realize maximum return on funds spent on research programs, data collection and analyses, and problem-solving

The Council welcomes and encourages the active participation of its sponsors and supporters in its activities and is pleased to provide those interested in supporting MPC with background information on its resources and programs either by correspondence or direct contact at the meetings.

THE FUTURE

Industry is faced with the challenge of understanding materials behavior to verify safety and reliability. MPC resources, capabilities in material screening, data collection, and data analysis and its record of tackling some of the most perplexing issues in the evaluation of materials and equipment are geared to this challenge.

MPC places emphasis on the assessment of suitability for continuing service under severe operating circumstances, e.g.:

  • damage propagation in steels in wet H2S service
  • new tests to determine creep damage in elevated temperature service
  • modeling hydrogen attack of chrome-molybdenum steels
  • on-line acoustic emission monitoring of hydrogen-induced cracking
  • simulation and prediction of service-induced weld failures in steam pipe materials
  • development of elevated temperature crack propagation equations for pressure vessel geometries
  • expansion of the low-stress creep data base for heater-tube materials
  • improved test and assessment methods for hydrogen-induced cracking
  • materials in high-pressure--high-temperature hydrogen service
  • development of a materials properties database

Responding to the technological needs of the 2000s and the next decade, the Council is conducting, among others, the following programs:

  • Elevated Temperature Life Assessment (Project Omega)
  • Fitness-for-Service for Process Equipment
  • Weld Evaluation and Repair of High-Energy (Steam) Piping
  • Hydrogen Attack Susceptibility and Detection for C-½Mo Steel in Refineries and Ammonia Plants

Other program subjects include demonstration of suitability for continuing operation; causes and prevention of cracking in Cr-Mo equipment; methodology for evaluating flaw growth under hydrogen attack conditions.

A review of these programs shows that each involves equipment design and integrity and NDE, not simply materials properties, that each considers the variability of materials and the resulting uncertainty about performance, and that each is complicated by or significantly involves a hostile operating environment. It must be noted that each of these programs is supported by companies concerned with reliability and the integrity of equipment in degrading service or the replacement of hardware.


Contact Dr. Martin Prager at 216-658-3847 phone or 216-658-3854 fax or at mprager@forengineers.org, for additional information.

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