zrasmusuperfan
Chemical
- Aug 28, 2014
- 2
Hello, I am a recent grad and have been tasked with my first real application. I am working at a plant that uses river water for cooling, the problem is the water that is taken from the river is full of sand and debris. There are multiple butterfly valves that are 60" in diameter. The total throughput is around 250,000 gpm from 6 valves. The issue comes through lack of maintenance of the valves and sand working its way on the seal and damaging the bushing, causing the leak. It is a significant leak on each valve. I am a chemical engineer, meaning I understand butterfly valves, but I am not familiar with the intimate details. Is there a product out there that is injectable that could form the seal that is worn out? Is this something I should contact the valve manufacturer about, would that even be helpful? Other than routine maintenance is there anything that could be done to mitigate the problem. This has apparently been an issue for several years. If there are no practical solutions to the valve is it practical to install some type of drain valve in the system, so that in the event of the water being turned off, the sand from the water doesn't settle and get all over the floor and piping system? Perhaps there are even valves that are designed to handle such flows with minimal leaking. If I am being unclear, I apologize, and sorry for my ignorance, I am learning. I appreciate any input or guidance. Thanks have a nice day.