dtse86
Mechanical
- Sep 9, 2009
- 24
Hi,
I'm a mechanical engineer, but I figured that I'd post this in the Chemical Engineering forum given that a lot of you guys seem to know about CO2 liquid storage and their components.
I was inspecting the installation of a new CO2 liquid storage tank and noticed that the drawings indicate the control valve for the vaporizers are drawn on the liquid side of the vaporizers on the P&ID's but in the field they are installed on the vapor side of the vaporizers. They appear to be a strict open close operation and to me I expect if it was meant to handle cold CO2 liquid it could handle the CO2 vapor.
I also figured that even though the tank is set up as a double shell with a vacuum, I still need to be concerned with icing on all of the piping coming out of the tank. Correct?
I'm a mechanical engineer, but I figured that I'd post this in the Chemical Engineering forum given that a lot of you guys seem to know about CO2 liquid storage and their components.
I was inspecting the installation of a new CO2 liquid storage tank and noticed that the drawings indicate the control valve for the vaporizers are drawn on the liquid side of the vaporizers on the P&ID's but in the field they are installed on the vapor side of the vaporizers. They appear to be a strict open close operation and to me I expect if it was meant to handle cold CO2 liquid it could handle the CO2 vapor.
I also figured that even though the tank is set up as a double shell with a vacuum, I still need to be concerned with icing on all of the piping coming out of the tank. Correct?