As mervvyn has pointed out, sulphuric acid is usually tansported as oleum, and it is produced by reacting H
2SO
4 with SO
3:
H
2SO
4 + SO
3 -----> H
2S
2O
7
and converted back into H
2SO
4 when reacted with water:
H
2S
2O
7 + H
2O -----> 2H
2SO
4
Moreover, conc. H
2SO
4 is a stronger oxidisation agent than dilute H
2SO
4 and their mechanisms of reaction with metals are completely different: In dilute H
2SO
4, metal reacts to form the respective metal-sulphate (hydrated) salt and H
2; whereas the metal-sulphate salt , SO
2 and water are formed when the metal is reacted with conc H
2SO
4. It really wouldn't be a good idea to transport conc. H
2SO
4 in steel containers or you'll be watching it to turn into a pile of dark redish-brown junk
I'm not sure what material they use for oleum containers, but it's probably not steel (?) since the moisture in the air is enough to turn some of the oleum into conc. H
2SO
4, and if those conc. H
2SO
4 reacts with the containers to form more water then you'll have a chain reaction going and you know what happens