MeOHguy
Chemical
- Apr 17, 2016
- 5
Dear All,
One of the PSVs in the plant is installed on an expansion vessel, whereby high pressure liquid is expanded from 70 bar.g to 5 bar.g (as attached). The PSV is sized for failure open of the level control valve in the upstream gas-liquid separator. The inlet nozzle is extended below the normal operating level to minimise noise in level control, whereas the portion of nozzle exposed above normal liquid level has openings to release the gas phase.
For a failure open of the level control valve in the upstream gas-liquid separator, could it result to 2-phase flow into the PSV?
Is there any calculation that could be done to evaluate the criteria of critical fluid velocity that would potentially lift the liquid phase into the PSV inlet in such a case?
Thank you and best regards,
MeOHguy
One of the PSVs in the plant is installed on an expansion vessel, whereby high pressure liquid is expanded from 70 bar.g to 5 bar.g (as attached). The PSV is sized for failure open of the level control valve in the upstream gas-liquid separator. The inlet nozzle is extended below the normal operating level to minimise noise in level control, whereas the portion of nozzle exposed above normal liquid level has openings to release the gas phase.
For a failure open of the level control valve in the upstream gas-liquid separator, could it result to 2-phase flow into the PSV?
Is there any calculation that could be done to evaluate the criteria of critical fluid velocity that would potentially lift the liquid phase into the PSV inlet in such a case?
Thank you and best regards,
MeOHguy