Mass Flow Meter Selection for Corrosive Gas — A Four-Industry Guide
Mass Flow Measurement • Industry Selection Guide

Mass Flow Meter Selection for Corrosive Gas — By Industry

Generic compatibility tables are a starting point, not an answer. This guide walks through the four industries where corrosive gas measurement actually happens — and how material, seal, and meter selection differ for each.

A generic "material compatibility chart" will tell you Hastelloy C resists chlorine and tantalum resists hydrofluoric acid. What it won't tell you is why a meter that works perfectly in a petrochemical HCl service fails within months on a semiconductor HCl line, or why two chlor-alkali plants running identical gas streams choose completely different meter configurations.

The answer is that corrosive gas measurement is industry-specific. The same molecule behaves differently depending on the upstream process, the moisture level, the impurity profile, the operating pressure, the temperature profile, and — importantly — what happens in the installation when something goes wrong.

This guide walks through the four industries where corrosive gas mass flow measurement is most concentrated: chlor-alkali, semiconductor specialty gases, oil & gas desulfurization, and fluorochemical / HF service. Each gets a dedicated scenario card with gas conditions, recommended configurations, and the specific pitfalls that cost operators real money to learn.

01 — The Framing

Why Industry-Specific Selection Matters

A textbook material compatibility chart tells you that 316L stainless resists dry chlorine at moderate temperatures. It tells you that tantalum is immune to hydrochloric acid. It tells you that Hastelloy C-276 handles wet chlorine. Those statements are all true — in isolation.

What the chart doesn't capture is the context that determines whether any of those statements apply to your installation:

The moisture content of the gas — dry Cl₂ is nothing like wet Cl₂. The temperature excursion range during startup, shutdown, and upsets — not just the steady-state number. The impurity profile — trace metals, trace oxygen, trace moisture that the process delivers even when the spec sheet says "pure." The installation orientation — because condensation traps form where gas lines aren't sloped correctly. The adjacent equipment — because leaks from upstream valves become your meter's problem.

Different industries control these context factors differently, and they create completely different environments around the same-named gas. A selection that's right for one industry is sometimes wrong for another.

The material compatibility chart is where specification starts. The industry context is where specification succeeds or fails.
02 — The Chemistry

Corrosion by Reaction Type, Not by Gas

Rather than memorize hundreds of gas-by-material combinations, it's more useful to think in terms of the reaction types that drive corrosion. Each reaction type has a dominant counter-material.

Corrosion Reaction Types — and What Resists Each Oxidizing Cl₂, HNO₃, O₃ → Hastelloy C, Ti Reducing acid HCl, H₂SO₄ dilute → Hastelloy B, Ta Sulfide / H₂S H₂S, mercaptans → NACE 316L, Duplex Fluoride HF, F₂, WF₆ → Monel, special Critical modifiers that change material choice: Moisture dry vs wet → 10× rate difference common Temperature every +20°C roughly doubles corrosion rate Mechanical stress stress + corrosion = SCC failure mode Industry context determines which modifiers dominate and which can be ignored
The four major reaction types cover most corrosive gas selection problems. The three modifiers underneath — moisture, temperature, and mechanical stress — are what make each industry's version of the same reaction type look different in practice.

For mass flow meter selection, only two wetted elements really matter: the flow tube material (contacts the gas directly) and the seal / gasket material (at process connections). Most selection mistakes are made on the seal side — flow tubes are usually sized for worst-case service, but seals are often specified against the "normal" operating condition and fail under upset conditions.

03 — The Principles

Three Cross-Industry Selection Principles

Principle 1

Design for the worst case, not the steady state

The gas composition during startup, shutdown, and process upset is often more corrosive than the normal operating composition. A meter sized for steady-state operation experiences moisture spikes during warm-up, acid condensation during cool-down, or oxidizer excursions during plant trips. Material and seal selection must survive these excursions, because they will happen.

Principle 2

Seal material matters more than tube material

Flow tube materials are selected from a small set of well-characterized alloys — 316L, Hastelloy C, tantalum, Monel. Seal materials have many more options and narrower compatibility windows. PTFE works for most but creeps under pressure. Perfluoroelastomers (FFKM) handle aggressive chemistry but have temperature limits and cost premium. Metal gaskets solve temperature but introduce tightness complexity. The seal is typically the first failure point.

Principle 3

Contamination trap points are leak initiators

Any place where the gas can sit stagnant — dead legs, low points in horizontal piping, unsloped sensor ports — accumulates moisture and impurities that accelerate corrosion. The meter installation geometry often determines whether a well-specified meter lasts five years or five months. Industry-specific installation practices reflect this.

04 — Industry One

Chlor-Alkali

Chlor-Alkali

Chlorine, Hydrogen Chloride, and Derivatives

Cl₂ electrolysis · HCl synthesis · NaOCl, PVC, titanium dioxide downstream

Chlor-alkali plants produce chlorine gas and sodium hydroxide from brine electrolysis. The chlorine side dominates corrosive gas measurement — Cl₂ itself, HCl produced downstream, and various chlorinated intermediates. This is a mature industry with decades of accumulated specification practice; the main selection question is usually matching plant-specific moisture and temperature conditions rather than navigating unknown chemistry.

Dry Cl₂ to users
Post-drying tower, feeding downstream units. Low moisture, 316L acceptable.
Wet Cl₂ from cell
Pre-drying, high moisture. Hastelloy C-276 or titanium required.
Anhydrous HCl
Synthesis unit output or tank vaporization. Hastelloy B-3 preferred for gas.
HCl to processes
Distribution to PVC, titanium dioxide, metal pickling lines.
  • Cl₂ (dry) <50 ppm H₂O · 20–40 °C · 0.5–6 barg · flow range from kg/h to tonnes/h
  • Cl₂ (wet) 1000–10000 ppm H₂O · 50–80 °C · 0.1–2 barg · pre-dryer service
  • HCl (anhydrous) <50 ppm H₂O · 20–60 °C · 1–10 barg · distribution to downstream
  • HCl (moist) vapor with moisture above saturation — worst case, forms liquid HCl
Meter Technology
  • Coriolis for fiscal and critical process streams — direct mass accuracy, wide turndown
  • Thermal mass for lower-accuracy monitoring (vent lines, distribution sub-metering)
Wetted Materials
  • Dry Cl₂ / HCl → 316L acceptable at moderate temperature; Hastelloy C-22 / C-276 for margin
  • Wet Cl₂ → Hastelloy C-276 or Titanium
  • Anhydrous HCl gas → Hastelloy B-3 for premium service
Seal Materials
  • PTFE or PFA for most Cl₂ and HCl service
  • FFKM (Kalrez-type) where higher temperature or dynamic seal service required
  • Avoid standard viton/FKM on Cl₂ — degrades rapidly
Specifying for normal, failing at startup

Plants that specify "dry Cl₂" service often see wet conditions during dryer regeneration cycles or dryer malfunction. A 316L meter sized for dry service corrodes quickly during even brief wet excursions. The safer default is Hastelloy C-276 unless you can guarantee moisture control under upset conditions.

Gasket substitution during maintenance

Original PTFE gaskets are often replaced with generic "high-performance" elastomers during maintenance, by technicians unfamiliar with chlorine chemistry. The replacement fails within weeks. Strict gasket specification and documentation is essential.

05 — Industry Two

Semiconductor Specialty Gases

Semiconductor

Silane, Ammonia, Etch Gases, and Metal Precursors

Deposition · etch · doping · cleaning · tool-level and bulk delivery

Semiconductor fabs use dozens of specialty gases — some corrosive, some toxic, some pyrophoric, some all three. Measurement points span from bulk delivery (cylinders, tube trailers) through sub-atmospheric distribution to tool-level mass flow controllers. The industry context is defined by two constraints absent in other industries: extreme purity requirements (parts-per-billion impurity tolerances) and tool-level micro-flow measurement (sccm range, not kg/h).

Bulk delivery
Gas cabinets, valve manifold boxes, distribution to fab. kg/h or Nm³/h range.
Process tool inlet
Inlet to etch / CVD / implant tools. Typically sccm to slpm range.
Abatement / scrubber input
Point-of-use destruction. Flow verification for compliance.
Clean-gas vent monitoring
Post-scrubber residual gas monitoring for environmental.
  • SiH₄ (silane) pyrophoric, mildly corrosive; ultra-pure delivery; dry conditions mandatory
  • NH₃ corrosive to copper alloys, compatible with stainless; high purity required
  • NF₃ mild corrosion but highly oxidizing; chamber cleaning agent; high-flow use
  • WF₆ / TaF₅ metal precursors; react with moisture to form HF in situ; nickel-based alloys only
  • HF (anhydrous) etch gas; extreme care on materials; see Section 7
  • HCl clean-gas etch; dry conditions; Hastelloy or stainless at moderate temp
Meter Technology
  • Coriolis (micro / small-bore) for bulk delivery where accuracy matters — typical sizes DN6–DN25
  • Thermal MFC for tool-level sccm measurement — semiconductor industry standard, not the scope of this guide
  • Thermal inline mass for distribution monitoring and lower-accuracy applications
Wetted Materials
  • Ultra-clean semiconductor service → Electropolished 316L (Ra ≤ 0.15 µm)
  • WF₆ and fluoride precursors → Hastelloy C-22 or Monel
  • Copper-aggressive gases (NH₃) → ensure no brass/bronze in wetted parts
  • Pyrophoric services (SiH₄) → leak-tight construction critical, material spec less sensitive
Seal Materials
  • Metal VCR / all-metal face seals for ultra-clean bulk delivery — eliminate elastomer outgassing
  • FFKM (Kalrez high-purity grade) where elastomer required
  • Avoid any fluorosilicone or common fluoroelastomer — outgassing and particle generation concerns
Surface finish inadequate for purity requirement

A meter that's electrically and chemically correct but has internal surface roughness above semiconductor spec will contaminate the gas stream through outgassing and particle shedding. Specify surface finish (Ra) explicitly and verify with material certificates.

Trace moisture destroys WF₆ compatibility

WF₆ reacts with moisture to form HF in situ. A meter rated for "dry WF₆" is destroyed within days if moisture ingress occurs (from upstream problems, or from improper commissioning purge). Nickel-based alloys and meticulous moisture control are both required, not either / or.

06 — Industry Three

Oil & Gas Desulfurization

Oil & Gas

H₂S, SO₂, and Sour Gas Service

Sour natural gas · amine treating · Claus unit · refinery off-gas

Oil and gas operations handle sulfur-bearing gases at multiple points: raw sour natural gas from the wellhead, amine unit overhead gas, Claus plant process gas, and refinery fuel gas with variable sulfur content. The industry context is defined by NACE MR0175 compliance — sour service qualification that mandates specific materials to prevent sulfide stress cracking, plus the operational reality of large pipe sizes, variable composition, and the need for robust continuous measurement.

Raw sour gas
Wellhead to treating unit. H₂S concentrations from ppm to %. High pressure.
Amine absorber gas
Treated gas outlet, typically ≤4 ppm H₂S. Verification of treatment efficiency.
Claus unit process gas
Acid gas feed to sulfur recovery. H₂S + SO₂ + CO₂. Elevated temperature.
Tail gas and flare
Residual gas after sulfur recovery. Environmental compliance metering.
  • H₂S (raw sour gas) ppm to %-level · 30–90 bar · 20–80 °C · moist · NACE MR0175 applies
  • SO₂ (process gas) Claus unit operating temperatures · moisture present · oxidizing
  • Acid gas mixtures H₂S + CO₂ + H₂O · amine unit regeneration · 40–80 °C
  • Refinery fuel gas variable composition · periodic H₂S breakthrough · continuous metering
Meter Technology
  • Coriolis for custody transfer, fiscal measurement, and high-value metering — NACE-compliant variants available
  • Thermal mass for continuous monitoring and environmental compliance reporting — large pipe sizes, lower accuracy acceptable
Wetted Materials
  • 316L with NACE MR0175 qualification for most sour gas service — hardness limits must be verified
  • Duplex or super-duplex stainless for high-chloride + H₂S combinations
  • Inconel 625 / Hastelloy C-276 for high H₂S percentage or elevated temperature
Seal Materials
  • NACE-qualified metal gaskets (e.g., spiral-wound with graphite) for high-pressure service
  • FFKM for elastomeric seals in sour service — verify vendor explicitly rates for H₂S
  • Avoid standard nitrile (NBR) — swells and degrades in H₂S contact
NACE certification assumed, not verified

Many flow meter vendors list "NACE compliant" on spec sheets without formal certification. In sour service, operators can be liable for accepting non-certified meters. Request the actual NACE MR0175 material test report with each meter, not just a marketing claim.

Sulfide stress cracking develops slowly

A meter with slightly-over-limit hardness may work for two years, then fail suddenly through stress corrosion cracking. The failure is catastrophic (loss of containment of sour gas) and not preceded by gradual warning signs. Material hardness specification is not optional — it's a safety barrier.

07 — Industry Four

Fluorochemical and HF

Fluorochemical

Hydrogen Fluoride, Fluorine, and Derivatives

HF production · F₂ electrolysis · fluorocarbon synthesis · specialty fluoride intermediates

Fluorochemical operations are the most materially aggressive service in routine industrial use. HF attacks silica — meaning glass, ceramics, and many oxide-passivated metals lose their protective layers. F₂ is so oxidizing that it reacts with water to form HF in situ, compounding the attack. The industry context demands the narrowest material selection window of the four industries covered in this guide, plus the most stringent safety and containment practices.

Anhydrous HF product
Production plant outlet, distribution to users. Moisture control critical.
F₂ electrolysis output
High-purity fluorine production for semiconductor and specialty chemistry.
Fluorocarbon precursors
SF₆, NF₃, and similar derivative production monitoring.
Distribution to users
Metering for downstream semiconductor, refrigerant, or specialty users.
  • HF (anhydrous) <10 ppm H₂O · 20–40 °C · 1–5 barg · moisture any higher forms hydrofluoric acid
  • HF (aqueous vapor) mixed with water vapor · dramatically more aggressive than anhydrous · rare as primary flow but possible during upsets
  • F₂ (fluorine) high purity · dry · maximum 20 °C preferred · requires passivation procedures
  • SF₆, NF₃ (derivatives) production side gases · moisture sensitivity varies by compound
Meter Technology
  • Coriolis is strongly preferred — vibrating tube construction allows use of Monel or Hastelloy tubing, direct mass output removes density uncertainty
  • Thermal mass less common here — sensor element exposure risk is higher, and HF chemistry punishes the heated probes
Wetted Materials
  • Monel 400 or Monel K-500 — the standard choice for anhydrous HF service
  • Hastelloy C-22 — acceptable for fluorine and some HF applications, especially mixed gases
  • Nickel 200 for certain specialty HF applications
  • 316L is NOT acceptable for wet HF or fluorine service — protective oxide removed by fluoride attack
Seal Materials
  • PTFE works for most anhydrous HF service but has temperature limits (<100 °C)
  • FFKM (fluorine-service grade) — not all FFKM grades are F₂-compatible; verify explicitly
  • Nickel gaskets for high-temperature or high-pressure HF service
  • Avoid elastomers with silica fillers — fluoride attack destroys them
Wet HF is a completely different service

A meter qualified for "HF" on a datasheet usually means anhydrous HF. Wet HF (aqueous HF vapor, or anhydrous HF with moisture ingress) is dramatically more aggressive and requires different materials. Any facility where moisture ingress is possible during upsets must specify for the wet case, not the anhydrous case.

Fluorine passivation is not optional

F₂ service requires the meter to be passivated — a controlled surface reaction that creates a stable fluoride film on wetted surfaces. A meter put into F₂ service without passivation fails within hours. The passivation procedure is a service requirement, not a commissioning afterthought.

08 — The Map

Cross-Industry Configuration Matrix

Consolidating the four industry cards into a single comparison matrix helps cross-reference material and seal choices across similar operating conditions. Rows are representative gases; columns are the material / seal / meter choices.

Industry Configuration Matrix — Representative Selections
Gas Service Industry Flow Tube Seal Meter Type
Dry Cl₂Chlor-alkali316L / Hastelloy C-22PTFECoriolis / Thermal
Wet Cl₂Chlor-alkaliHastelloy C-276 / TiPTFE / FFKMCoriolis preferred
Anhydrous HClChlor-alkali / SemiHastelloy B-3PTFECoriolis
SiH₄SemiconductorEP 316LMetal VCRCoriolis (bulk)
NH₃Semiconductor316L (no Cu alloys)FFKMCoriolis / Thermal
WF₆SemiconductorHastelloy / MonelMetal sealsCoriolis
NF₃Semiconductor316L / passivatedFFKM high-F gradeThermal / Coriolis
Sour gas (H₂S)Oil & GasNACE 316L / DuplexMetal gasket / FFKMCoriolis / Thermal
Claus process gasOil & GasInconel 625Metal / FFKMThermal
Anhydrous HFFluorochemicalMonel 400PTFE / NickelCoriolis
F₂FluorochemicalMonel / HastelloyPassivated metalCoriolis (Monel)

The matrix reveals several patterns worth noting. First, Coriolis dominates the premium selections — its direct mass measurement and wide material option range makes it the default for high-stakes service across all four industries. Second, seal technology splits cleanly by industry: general chlor-alkali uses PTFE, semiconductor moves to metal face seals, oil & gas reaches for NACE-qualified metal gaskets, fluorochemical mixes PTFE for anhydrous service with metal for severe conditions. Third, 316L is useful less often than generic charts suggest — once you add realistic worst-case moisture, temperature excursion, and impurity factors, the "316L acceptable" zone shrinks quickly.

09 — The Warnings

Selection Traps That Span All Industries

Some specification mistakes appear repeatedly across all four industries. The five below are the most common, and the most expensive.

Specifying for the normal operating point rather than the worst case

Upsets happen. Dryer regeneration cycles, moisture breakthrough from upstream failures, temperature excursions during startup — these are not exceptional events, they are part of the operating envelope. A meter specified for steady-state that fails on the first upset costs more than the margin of upgrading materials at procurement.

Assuming "compatible" means "immune"

Compatibility tables rate materials against chemicals as A / B / C — not as "lasts forever" vs "fails immediately." A B-rated material in aggressive service may have a service life of 2 years instead of 10. Lifecycle cost analysis matters, not just survival.

Gasket substitution during maintenance

The original specified gasket is correct. Generic substitutions during field maintenance are a leading cause of post-commissioning failures. Procurement specifications should extend to spare parts inventory, not just initial installation.

Missing the "trace impurity" problem

A gas that's 99% compatible with a given material can still fail that material if the 1% impurity is the wrong chemistry. Refinery fuel gas with occasional H₂S breakthrough destroys a non-NACE 316L meter; "pure" HF from a regenerated dryer with trace moisture destroys Monel. Impurity profiles matter.

Ignoring installation geometry

The best meter in the world fails in a low-point installation that collects condensate, or after a dead-leg that accumulates impurities. Material selection assumes the meter is installed correctly — when it isn't, the meter experiences worse-than-bulk conditions continuously.

10 — Product Fit

Supmea Product Mapping by Industry

Supmea's mass flow meter product lines map onto the four industries with a specific technology-to-service correspondence that reflects the patterns identified in this guide.

The FCC300 Coriolis series is the appropriate starting point for most corrosive gas applications where Coriolis is the right technology choice. Standard wetted material options include 316L, Hastelloy C-22 / C-276, and Tantalum. For chlor-alkali (dry Cl₂ and HCl distribution), oil & gas (NACE sour service), and general semiconductor bulk delivery, FCC300 with appropriate material specification covers the application.

The FCC800 Coriolis series extends into the most demanding services — high-pressure sour gas measurement, cryogenic fluoride applications, and high-accuracy fiscal custody transfer. The series supports extended wetted material options including Monel for anhydrous HF, and carries the accuracy class (±0.15%) required for custody transfer in oil & gas applications. For fluorochemical and HF service specifically, FCC800 with Monel tubing is the targeted configuration.

The SUP-MF thermal mass flow series serves lower-pressure, continuous-monitoring applications where Coriolis is over-specified — flare gas metering, compliance monitoring on clean-gas vents, amine unit distribution sub-metering. SUP-MF is not appropriate for pyrophoric or highly reactive services where sensor element exposure risk is elevated.

Each product line can be supplied with the material certifications, NACE MR0175 compliance documentation, or surface finish specifications appropriate to the target industry. The Supmea application team reviews specific gas conditions — including moisture levels, temperature excursion ranges, and upset scenarios — to recommend the configuration that survives the installation's actual worst case, not just the steady-state spec. Full product specifications are available on the Supmea product site.

For background on the corrosion mechanisms referenced in this guide, Wikipedia's articles on corrosion, sulfide stress cracking, and the Hastelloy alloy family provide useful starting points.

Specifying a Meter for Corrosive Gas Service?

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