jhamil1
Mechanical
- Oct 28, 2008
- 18
Could someone verify that I am doing this correctly. The number calculated seems excessive. I am new to the industry and have been looking over equations and have nothing to compare my answer. In advance, I appreciate the help.
Problem Statement: An 8" nominal Rockwell dynamic balance plug valve was left open approximately 19 minutes. The inlet pressure was 825 psig and the valve was open to atmosphere.
Find: How much gas was lost to the atmosphere.
Knowns:
- Valve properties -
Cv=2680
Critical pressure drop ratio=0.42
- Supply Line -
8" NPS schedule 80
- Fluid Properties -
SG=0.595
- Choked flow conditions -
Expansion coefficient (Y)=0.667
Compressibility Factor (Z)=0.8728
Comments: I have read the post at Milton Beychok's site at
which is very good by the way. I understand the equation, but is there a way to relate the flow coefficient (Cv) to the discharge coefficient (Cd)? All most all of the information I deal with has everything based on the flow coefficient.
My Solution: I researched the ANSI/ISA-75.01.01 standard, "Flow Equations for Sizing Control Valves". Using Eq. 14B
Cv=(Q/Y*1360*Pi)*sqrt[(SG*T1*Z)/(Fy*xT)] (English Units)
Where,
Cv=2680 (from manufacturers data)
Q=? cf/h
Y=0.667
Pi=825+14.73=839.73 psia
SG=0.595
T1=60F=520R
Z=0.8728
Fy=k/1.4=1.27/1.4=0.9071
xT=0.42 (from manufacturers data)
Calculated flow rate, Q=1,279,847 scf/min.
In terms of 1000 of cf:
Q/1000 = 1,280 Mscf/min
Total lost over a 19 min period:
Total lost=Q*t --> 1,280*19min=24,317 Mscf
Questions:
Is this the correct equation to use for this situation?
If not, which equations are appropriate? (in terms of the flow coefficient (Cv))
How accurate is this equation?
If this is wrong could someone do an example of how to properly calculate this situation?
Again thank you for all the help and comments.
Problem Statement: An 8" nominal Rockwell dynamic balance plug valve was left open approximately 19 minutes. The inlet pressure was 825 psig and the valve was open to atmosphere.
Find: How much gas was lost to the atmosphere.
Knowns:
- Valve properties -
Cv=2680
Critical pressure drop ratio=0.42
- Supply Line -
8" NPS schedule 80
- Fluid Properties -
SG=0.595
- Choked flow conditions -
Expansion coefficient (Y)=0.667
Compressibility Factor (Z)=0.8728
Comments: I have read the post at Milton Beychok's site at
which is very good by the way. I understand the equation, but is there a way to relate the flow coefficient (Cv) to the discharge coefficient (Cd)? All most all of the information I deal with has everything based on the flow coefficient.
My Solution: I researched the ANSI/ISA-75.01.01 standard, "Flow Equations for Sizing Control Valves". Using Eq. 14B
Cv=(Q/Y*1360*Pi)*sqrt[(SG*T1*Z)/(Fy*xT)] (English Units)
Where,
Cv=2680 (from manufacturers data)
Q=? cf/h
Y=0.667
Pi=825+14.73=839.73 psia
SG=0.595
T1=60F=520R
Z=0.8728
Fy=k/1.4=1.27/1.4=0.9071
xT=0.42 (from manufacturers data)
Calculated flow rate, Q=1,279,847 scf/min.
In terms of 1000 of cf:
Q/1000 = 1,280 Mscf/min
Total lost over a 19 min period:
Total lost=Q*t --> 1,280*19min=24,317 Mscf
Questions:
Is this the correct equation to use for this situation?
If not, which equations are appropriate? (in terms of the flow coefficient (Cv))
How accurate is this equation?
If this is wrong could someone do an example of how to properly calculate this situation?
Again thank you for all the help and comments.