crazyjpeters
Mechanical
- Dec 7, 2009
- 15
I'm evaluating one of our flash tanks which has experienced concentrated erosion directly downstream of the tangential inlet nozzle.
I've seen this posting regarding a similar topic:
The tank I'm evaluating has a blowdown throttling valve discharging into the tank. Rather a small nozzle length, and does not increase in size. For numbers, this is a 2600psi to 100 psi tank letdown. 60,000 lb/hr water/steam going into a 1.1" ID nozzle. This to me seems extremely small. Judging by that other thread, and most other literature I can find on flash tanks / separator tanks, to keep the velocity down, I'd need something like an 8inch nozzle after my throttling valve.
My question is:
-has anyone run into a similar situation? Perhaps there's a legitimate reason to locate it so close to the tank and have high velocity. Hoping that all the flashing occurs in the tank and no flashing steam rocketing the condensate through the circumferential wear plate?
I'm struggling to find any design guideline that would recommend a nozzle that small, but have a hard time believing that a big-time consulting firm would screw something like this up. 30yrs after commissioning, so hard to really get answers from them.
I've seen this posting regarding a similar topic:
The tank I'm evaluating has a blowdown throttling valve discharging into the tank. Rather a small nozzle length, and does not increase in size. For numbers, this is a 2600psi to 100 psi tank letdown. 60,000 lb/hr water/steam going into a 1.1" ID nozzle. This to me seems extremely small. Judging by that other thread, and most other literature I can find on flash tanks / separator tanks, to keep the velocity down, I'd need something like an 8inch nozzle after my throttling valve.
My question is:
-has anyone run into a similar situation? Perhaps there's a legitimate reason to locate it so close to the tank and have high velocity. Hoping that all the flashing occurs in the tank and no flashing steam rocketing the condensate through the circumferential wear plate?
I'm struggling to find any design guideline that would recommend a nozzle that small, but have a hard time believing that a big-time consulting firm would screw something like this up. 30yrs after commissioning, so hard to really get answers from them.