Pipe marking
In the process industry, chemical industry, manufacturing industry, and other commercial and industrial contexts, pipe marking is used to identify the contents, properties and flow direction of fluids in piping. It is typically carried out by marking piping through labels and color codes. Pipe marking helps personnel and fire response teams identify the correct pipes for operational, maintenance or emergency response purposes.
Background
Pipes are used extensively in commercial and industrial buildings and on industrial plant to transfer fluids between items of plant and equipment. Positive identification assists operations personnel to correctly identify plant when carrying out routine or maintenance activities, and for emergency personnel when responding to emergencies. Pipe marking is particularly important for identification where pipes run along pipe racks, through walls and bulkheads and through floors.A range of corporate, national and international codes, standards and regulations are in use around the world.
National standards: United States
ANSI/ASME Standards
In the United States, Occupational Safety and Health Administration regulations recommend following American Society of Mechanical Engineers Standard A13.1-2015 - Scheme for the Identification of Piping Systems.The standard states that labels should be placed where easily viewed by a person standing near the pipe at any of the following points:
- Valves and flanges.
- Approximately every to on straight sections.
- A pipe passes through a wall or floor.
- Any pipe direction changes, such bends or junctions.
| Meaning | Background Color | Text Color | Example |
| Hazardous materials | Safety Yellow | Black | Acetylene |
| Non-hazardous liquids | Safety Green | White | Stormwater |
| Non-hazardous gases | Safety Blue | White | Nitrogen |
| Firefighting materials | Safety Red | White | Sprinkler Water |
2015 revisions
2015 revisions added oxidizing materials to the existing 'Flammables' classification. The other major change allowed and encouraged labels to incorporate the GHS signal word, hazard pictograms, and hazard statements. This addition helped identify additional dangers when dealing with materials that fit into multiple categories, like hydrogen sulfide, which is both flammable and toxic.IIAR Bulletin #114
In 2014, the International Institute of Ammonia Refrigeration introduced a specialized label design for use when marking pipes associated with refrigeration systems using ammonia, including information such as the physical state, pressure and purpose in the system.NFPA 99C 2002
The National Fire Protection Association have a special labeling system in the standard for Health Care Facilities, such as hospitals and dentistry offices. This standard puts more emphasis on gases found in Medical gas supply systems, which consist of both oxidizing gases and gases that displace oxygen.| Gas | Background Color | Text Color |
| Carbon Dioxide | Gray | Black or White |
| Helium | Brown | White |
| Medical Air | Yellow | Black |
| Oxygen | Green | White |
| Oxygen/Carbon Mixtures | Green | White |
| Nitrogen | Black | White |
| Nitrous Oxide | Blue | White |
| Waste Anesthetic Gas Disposal | Purple | White |
| Medical Surgical Vacuum | White | Black |
| Non-Medical Air | Yellow/White Diagonal Striped | Black |
| Non-medical and Level 3 Vacuum | Black/White Diagonal Striped | Black |
| Laboratory Air | Yellow/White Checkerboard | Black |
| Laboratory Vacuum | Black/White Checkerboard | Black |
| Instrument Air | Red | White |
National standards: United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom there are three principal regulations that mandate the marking of equipment and piping:- Classification, Labelling and Packaging of Chemicals '' Regulations 2015,
- Health and Safety Regulations 1996,
- Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations 1998,
The regulations do not specify a specific marking system, but BS EN ISO 1710 Graphical symbols — Safety colours and safety signs'' is often used.
BS 1710 Safety colours and signs
A widely used British Standard for marking equipment is:- BS 1710:2019 Graphical symbols — Safety colours and safety signs — Registered safety signs
| Contents | Colour | BS 4800 colour |
| Water | Green | 12 D 45 |
| Steam | Silver-grey | 10 A 03 |
| Oils | Brown | 06 C 39 |
| Gases | Yellow Ochre | 08 C 35 |
| Acids and Alkalis | Violet | 22 C 37 |
| Air | Light Blue | 20 E 51 |
| Other liquids | Black | 00 E 53 |
| Electrical & Ventilation | Orange | 06 E 51 |
In addition to the basic colours, certain safety colours are used:
| Safety service | Colour | BS 4800 colour |
| Fire fighting | Red | 04 E 53 |
| Warning | Yellow | 08 E 51 |
| Fresh water | Auxiliary Blue | 18 E 53 |
| User defined | User defined |
The arrangement of markings is for the safety colour to be between bands of the basic colour.
Firewater service would be:
The pipe contents must be identified adjacent to the banding. This can be done by giving either:
- The full name
- Abbreviation
- Chemical symbol
- Refrigerant number
- Coloured bands
Examples using this system are as shown.
National standards: India
IS 2379 Pipelines Identification Colour Code
The Indian Standard IS 2379 provides for a ground colour and a coloured band on piping to identify material.| Substance | Ground colour |
| Water | Sea green |
| Steam | Aluminium |
| Oils and combustible liquid | Light brown |
| Acids | Dark violet |
| Air | Sky blue |
| Gases | Canary yellow |
| Alkalise | Smoke grey |
| Other gases and liquids | Black |
| Hydrocarbons/organic compounds | Dark aluminium grey |
Colour bands of 25 mm to 100 mm width are placed at locations such as battery limits, intersections, near valves, at walls, starting and terminating points. There is a large range of bands which define the contents of the line. For example, for oils.
| Substance | Ground colour | Band colour |
| Light diesel | Light brown | Brilliant green |
| High speed diesel | Light brown | - |
| Paraffin oil | Light brown | Signal red |
| Quenching oil | Light brown | Canary yellow |
| Furnace fuel | Light brown | French blue |
| Lubricating oil | Light brown | Light grey |
| Hydraulic power | Light brown | Dark violet |
| Transformer oil | Light brown | Light orange |
National standards: Australia
Pipes, ducts and conduits are identification by the Australian Standard AS 1345—1995 “Identification of the contents of pipes, conduits and ducts”| Service | AS 2700 Colour |
| Water | G21 Jade |
| Steam | N24 Silver Grey |
| Oils, flammable liquids | X53 Golden Tan |
| Gases | Y44 Sand |
| Acids & alkalis | P23 Lilac |
| Air | B25 Aqua |
| Other Liquids | N61 Black |
| Fire Services | R13 Signal Red |
| Electric Power | X15 Orange |
| Communication | N14 White |
| Dangerous Materials | Y14 Golden Yellow + N61 Black |
International standards
ISO 14726 Ships and marine facilities
Ships and marine facilities must conform to an international standard for piping systems identification. This is ISO 14726:2008 Ships and marine technology — Identification colours for the content of piping systems.This is a two-colour banded marking system. The main colour shows what the fluid is being used for. This is on either side of the secondary colour which indicates what the substance actually is. The main colours are as follows:
- Black - Waste media
- Blue - Fresh water
- Brown - Fuel
- Green – Sea water
- Grey - Non-flammable gases
- Maroon - Air and sounding pipes
- Orange - Oils other than fuels
- Silver - Steam
- Red - Fire fighting
- Violet - Acids, alkalis
- White - Air in ventilation systems
- Yellow - Flammable gases