erbru
Chemical
- May 23, 2015
- 27
Hi,
I'm new to this forum and would really appreciate some help.
I've been asked to design a line in which hot water (90-95 degC) must fall under gravity from an existing water distillation unit / water storage tank combination (a few meters apart, slight vertical drop from the last condenser of the distiller to the tank inlet) to a further storage tank. The line I must install will tie in a tee just above the inlet valve into the original tank.
The distance between the distiller and the new tank is considerable, a piping run of 130m including 18m of vertical drop (the original tank is on the 4th floor and the new tank on the ground floor). Both the distiller and the tanks operate at atmospheric pressure and it is critical not to back-pressure the water distiller in anyway. The current line is 2 inch OD and the water flow is 3 m3/h, (which has some variation on it possible depending on the distiller output). The situation will be controlled in a fully manual way and is only required in emergencies.
I studied the paper from PD Hills (Designing Piping for Gravity Flow 1983)
Initally I wanted to design for a flooded flow using an orifice plate to choke flow just before the inlet to the new tank to calibrate this for the flow produced by the distiller. However I was advised very strongly against flooding the line from the distiller by the manufacturer and told to do the output flow purely by self-venting flow. As this is a manually operated situation I feel a control valve would be impractical as the operators will have difficulty adjusting to the constant variation in output.
Therefore I am now aiming for self venting flow but I am concerned about the unpredictability of the configuration. There will be sloped horizontal sections (2% or more) interpersed by short vertical sections (3-4 metres at a time to drop a building level). The pipe must be run through an existing building which leaves little choices for choosing the exact pipe run.
PD Hills paper mentions that "little information is available on unflooded flow in systems that include bends, especially for flow changes from vertical to nearly horizontal and vice versa ...entrainment and surging may still occur due to the effect of bends in the system". He goes on to give advice on how to run the slopes and bends (which I may or may not be able to apply due to building restrictions).
My initial thought was to size the system continuing in the 2inch OD, continuing the established self venting flow regime. However I could also push to do this tank filling via a pump in a more controlled way if the project if the risk of deregulation is too great via gravity. I just don't want to accept defeat too easily (and the pump system would have other issues).
Can any of you offer any advice? Surges could have a very serious effect of deregulating the distiller and this ia a process critical fluid so shutting down the distiller would be a serious issue. I understood that there is even risk of damage to the distiller.
Thanks
I'm new to this forum and would really appreciate some help.
I've been asked to design a line in which hot water (90-95 degC) must fall under gravity from an existing water distillation unit / water storage tank combination (a few meters apart, slight vertical drop from the last condenser of the distiller to the tank inlet) to a further storage tank. The line I must install will tie in a tee just above the inlet valve into the original tank.
The distance between the distiller and the new tank is considerable, a piping run of 130m including 18m of vertical drop (the original tank is on the 4th floor and the new tank on the ground floor). Both the distiller and the tanks operate at atmospheric pressure and it is critical not to back-pressure the water distiller in anyway. The current line is 2 inch OD and the water flow is 3 m3/h, (which has some variation on it possible depending on the distiller output). The situation will be controlled in a fully manual way and is only required in emergencies.
I studied the paper from PD Hills (Designing Piping for Gravity Flow 1983)
Initally I wanted to design for a flooded flow using an orifice plate to choke flow just before the inlet to the new tank to calibrate this for the flow produced by the distiller. However I was advised very strongly against flooding the line from the distiller by the manufacturer and told to do the output flow purely by self-venting flow. As this is a manually operated situation I feel a control valve would be impractical as the operators will have difficulty adjusting to the constant variation in output.
Therefore I am now aiming for self venting flow but I am concerned about the unpredictability of the configuration. There will be sloped horizontal sections (2% or more) interpersed by short vertical sections (3-4 metres at a time to drop a building level). The pipe must be run through an existing building which leaves little choices for choosing the exact pipe run.
PD Hills paper mentions that "little information is available on unflooded flow in systems that include bends, especially for flow changes from vertical to nearly horizontal and vice versa ...entrainment and surging may still occur due to the effect of bends in the system". He goes on to give advice on how to run the slopes and bends (which I may or may not be able to apply due to building restrictions).
My initial thought was to size the system continuing in the 2inch OD, continuing the established self venting flow regime. However I could also push to do this tank filling via a pump in a more controlled way if the project if the risk of deregulation is too great via gravity. I just don't want to accept defeat too easily (and the pump system would have other issues).
Can any of you offer any advice? Surges could have a very serious effect of deregulating the distiller and this ia a process critical fluid so shutting down the distiller would be a serious issue. I understood that there is even risk of damage to the distiller.
Thanks