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Flare header back pressure change

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Hasab

Chemical
Oct 7, 2019
28
Hi guys,
hope u all doing well.

How I can understand back pressure as the pressure drop in the line? I seek for an intuitive explanation.

Thanks.
 
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It is the pressure required to push the fluid into and through the system, in this case a flare.

Good Luck,
Latexman

 
Thanks for reply.

I am not clear yet. does back pressure has relation with pressure drop in the line?
 
You need to define this better.

Flare headers often have a fixed back pressure caused by other sources using the flare header or sometimes a constant flow to maintain the flame. That pressure can rise if some other piece of plant dumps into the header.

Then you have your back pressure in your connection to the flare header. This is caused by fluid flow but is in addition to the static flare header pressure.

But the devil is in the details you haven't supplied....

Remember - More details = better answers
Also: If you get a response it's polite to respond to it.
 
Thanks LittleInch, i am more clear now regarding flare header. however, in general does the back pressure in a line same as the pressure drop in that line?
 
The back pressure can be seen as the specific point pressure along the line, i.e. P1 , P2, etc., and the pressure drop is the difference between two points, i.e. DP= P1-P2.
 
Hi mk3223,
Thanks for your share, i got your point.
 
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