365che
Chemical
- Jun 22, 2022
- 32
Hi,
We have a ~30,000 gal tank that we use to hold fatty waste. In order to avoid fat solidification in the tank, we apply steam through an internal heating coil. The steam is regulated via an on/off discrete block valve controlled by the DCS. When the temp reaches the high end of the range the valve is commanded to close, when temp reaches low end of the range the valve opens. Immediately following the steam valve, but prior to entering into the tanks coil inlet, is a PRV.
Note: An RTD mounted on the side of the tank sends temperature readings to the DCS.
Once the heating coil exits the tank, it is met by a corrugated flex line (~6' off the ground) followed by a bucket trap on ground level. The condensate that passes through the steam trap enters into a condensate return header and ultimately heads to the condensate return tank to be fed back through the boiler system.
This design setup is legacy. The corrugated metal flex line has busted more than once. I figure this is the work of water hammer.
I'm looking for general design practices to prevent this incident from reoccurring.
What I've come up with so far:
1) Determine source of water hammer + provide necessary design changes. Any ideas?
-Steam occasionally getting through the trap.
-Sudden temperature changes from transfer of fat into the tank shocking heating coil.
-Sudden temperature changes in the coil from steam valve opening 0 to 100% suddenly rather than gradually.
-Note: This issue has historically occurred in colder months. The tank is located outside. The tank and all associated piping are insulated.
2) Check sizing of PRV
3) Check condition of PRV (it's old and potentially damaged)
4) Is PRV in proper location.
If the overall picture is unclear, I'd be more than happy to draw out a simple diagram. Unfortunately, I was unable to do so at this particular time.
We have a ~30,000 gal tank that we use to hold fatty waste. In order to avoid fat solidification in the tank, we apply steam through an internal heating coil. The steam is regulated via an on/off discrete block valve controlled by the DCS. When the temp reaches the high end of the range the valve is commanded to close, when temp reaches low end of the range the valve opens. Immediately following the steam valve, but prior to entering into the tanks coil inlet, is a PRV.
Note: An RTD mounted on the side of the tank sends temperature readings to the DCS.
Once the heating coil exits the tank, it is met by a corrugated flex line (~6' off the ground) followed by a bucket trap on ground level. The condensate that passes through the steam trap enters into a condensate return header and ultimately heads to the condensate return tank to be fed back through the boiler system.
This design setup is legacy. The corrugated metal flex line has busted more than once. I figure this is the work of water hammer.
I'm looking for general design practices to prevent this incident from reoccurring.
What I've come up with so far:
1) Determine source of water hammer + provide necessary design changes. Any ideas?
-Steam occasionally getting through the trap.
-Sudden temperature changes from transfer of fat into the tank shocking heating coil.
-Sudden temperature changes in the coil from steam valve opening 0 to 100% suddenly rather than gradually.
-Note: This issue has historically occurred in colder months. The tank is located outside. The tank and all associated piping are insulated.
2) Check sizing of PRV
3) Check condition of PRV (it's old and potentially damaged)
4) Is PRV in proper location.
If the overall picture is unclear, I'd be more than happy to draw out a simple diagram. Unfortunately, I was unable to do so at this particular time.