ankur61
Chemical
- Dec 8, 2023
- 5
Dear All,
I have a liquid ammonia pipeline from the ammonia storage tank used for ship loading with a 15 day cycle for each ship load. There are two aspects I am looking for the design of cooldown system for the nearly 10 km of pipeline.
1. The cooldown is to be completed just before the ship hooks-up for loading with a ship loading rate of 1200 T/h. Any vapors due to flash of the cold liquid ammonia (-33 deg C) during cooldown operation shall be recycled to the BOG compression and refrigeration system at the storage end and not at the ship end. Based on this do I have to provide a separate cooldown pump or can I have a small stream diverted from the main loading pump with flow control injecting a controlled quantity of ammonia in the line. At the loading end if I provide a vapor /two-phase flow line returning back to the ammonia storage tank would it work, or pressure losses in this much length would prevent the vapor / two-phase fluid to return to the tank. What would be the practical and economical scheme for the aforementioned cooldown scheme?
2. While slow cooldown to prevent thermal shocks to the pipeline is known to me, the time required to cooldown this pipeline with a given temperature decrease (degrees C per hour) is something I would like to know. The heat transfer calculations based on metal mass of the pipe cooling from ambient to final cooldown has already been performed by me. In this I have considered that the cooldown liquid quantity will be based on both the sensible heat transfer to the metal by the cold ammonia as well as the enthalpy of vaporization which will flash the liquid ammonia. In addition heat ingress from the ambient has also been considered while performing cooldown operations. The mass flow rate has then been arrived on a one-hour cooling basis which basically may not be correct. Any suggestions for such a calculation considering steady-state heat transfer. This is not really steady-state in the truest sense but I don't have the required knowledge or tools for a transient or dynamic heat transfer analysis for the pipeline cooldown calculations.
I have a liquid ammonia pipeline from the ammonia storage tank used for ship loading with a 15 day cycle for each ship load. There are two aspects I am looking for the design of cooldown system for the nearly 10 km of pipeline.
1. The cooldown is to be completed just before the ship hooks-up for loading with a ship loading rate of 1200 T/h. Any vapors due to flash of the cold liquid ammonia (-33 deg C) during cooldown operation shall be recycled to the BOG compression and refrigeration system at the storage end and not at the ship end. Based on this do I have to provide a separate cooldown pump or can I have a small stream diverted from the main loading pump with flow control injecting a controlled quantity of ammonia in the line. At the loading end if I provide a vapor /two-phase flow line returning back to the ammonia storage tank would it work, or pressure losses in this much length would prevent the vapor / two-phase fluid to return to the tank. What would be the practical and economical scheme for the aforementioned cooldown scheme?
2. While slow cooldown to prevent thermal shocks to the pipeline is known to me, the time required to cooldown this pipeline with a given temperature decrease (degrees C per hour) is something I would like to know. The heat transfer calculations based on metal mass of the pipe cooling from ambient to final cooldown has already been performed by me. In this I have considered that the cooldown liquid quantity will be based on both the sensible heat transfer to the metal by the cold ammonia as well as the enthalpy of vaporization which will flash the liquid ammonia. In addition heat ingress from the ambient has also been considered while performing cooldown operations. The mass flow rate has then been arrived on a one-hour cooling basis which basically may not be correct. Any suggestions for such a calculation considering steady-state heat transfer. This is not really steady-state in the truest sense but I don't have the required knowledge or tools for a transient or dynamic heat transfer analysis for the pipeline cooldown calculations.