erbru
Chemical
- May 23, 2015
- 27
I am working for a client who has an stainless steel low pressure vertical water tank for which there is no technical data or drawings
It has a useable volume of 33.8 m3 (from nameplate) and has a diameter of approx 3m and height 5m
The nameplate also says:
S 1 bar
PE 1.5 bar (this is France where PE = pression d'epreuve = test pressure)
No mention of whether bar is relative or gauge pressure (we presume gauge) nor design temperature
I guess S is the MAWP but not sure.
Can I use this information (eg assume 1.5 bar test pressure is 0.5 barg) to estimate by back-calculation the possible wall thickness and at what pressure to rate the relief device?
I need also to know the resistance to vacuum.
Or do I have to actually measure the wall thickness (eg by ultrasound) which is a difficult act (empty tank , remove insulation, mounting on a scaffold, etc) to be sure?
The vessel is 21 years old and has undergone temperature cycling (heated once a week from 25 to 85 °C) so may have some fatigue. Not sure how to factor this into the calculation. It needs to last a couple of years more before they replace it.
It has a useable volume of 33.8 m3 (from nameplate) and has a diameter of approx 3m and height 5m
The nameplate also says:
S 1 bar
PE 1.5 bar (this is France where PE = pression d'epreuve = test pressure)
No mention of whether bar is relative or gauge pressure (we presume gauge) nor design temperature
I guess S is the MAWP but not sure.
Can I use this information (eg assume 1.5 bar test pressure is 0.5 barg) to estimate by back-calculation the possible wall thickness and at what pressure to rate the relief device?
I need also to know the resistance to vacuum.
Or do I have to actually measure the wall thickness (eg by ultrasound) which is a difficult act (empty tank , remove insulation, mounting on a scaffold, etc) to be sure?
The vessel is 21 years old and has undergone temperature cycling (heated once a week from 25 to 85 °C) so may have some fatigue. Not sure how to factor this into the calculation. It needs to last a couple of years more before they replace it.