jdogg05
Mechanical
- Jan 14, 2013
- 77
I was reading on how a ARV (automatic recirculation valve) works and came across the following web page:
It shows a cutaway of a valve that is similar to the one installed on the discharge of the LP BFW pumps in our plant.
What I am having trouble understanding is: how is a check valve actuated? I understood it to be actuated by flow (because there is very little pressure drop across a properly spec'd check valve; therefore, differential pressure can't be doing it...). With the ARV, if the check valve is flow actuated, how is the passive control accomplished? i.e., as I understand it, when the pump is running the flow will always keep the ARV open to the process flow piping (not the recirc. line). The only time the flow would be directed to the recirculation line is when the pump is shut off... Why does it need to be recirculated then? Is it maybe that the ARV under full pump operation is actually open to the recirc. line a bit? Isn't that inefficient?
It shows a cutaway of a valve that is similar to the one installed on the discharge of the LP BFW pumps in our plant.
What I am having trouble understanding is: how is a check valve actuated? I understood it to be actuated by flow (because there is very little pressure drop across a properly spec'd check valve; therefore, differential pressure can't be doing it...). With the ARV, if the check valve is flow actuated, how is the passive control accomplished? i.e., as I understand it, when the pump is running the flow will always keep the ARV open to the process flow piping (not the recirc. line). The only time the flow would be directed to the recirculation line is when the pump is shut off... Why does it need to be recirculated then? Is it maybe that the ARV under full pump operation is actually open to the recirc. line a bit? Isn't that inefficient?