Blazer406
Mechanical
- Sep 27, 2006
- 34
I've been going round and round with trying to figure this out.
Product: 37% HCL
Tank: 6500 gal HDPE tank
There is an venting "study" where an engineering company studied the potential internal pressures and ACFM while loading HCL from a tanker truck into the storage tank. You can find this study on PolyProcessing's website. They suggest that ASTM D1998 tanks are designed to 10" W.C. internal pressure. Some of the people I have asked quotes for that sell D1998 tanks are balking at us asking for a tank capable of 10" W.C. internal pressure. In a nutshell, the study calculates the recommended "vent" size which in most cases is 6". The more simple fume scrubber is a small pot off to the side with water inside and the 6" vent coming off the top of the HCL tank is submerged in 6" of water. This automatically makes the internal tank pressure have to rise above 6" W.C. to get any flow of fumes into the scrubber. This is where the rub is.....
Section 1.2 of D1998-06 specifically states that the standard does not apply if the tank is for use at any pressures other than atmospheric pressure.
Section 1.3 says "Special design considerations not covered in this specification shall be given to vessels subject to super imposed mechanical forces.......; and vessels subject to superimposed pressures exceeding 10 in. of water."
If I take it literally, any internal pressure that is not exactly equal to atmospheric..... requires some "special design consideration" and hence.... isn't covered by D1998.
I don't actually think that is exactly what they intended.
Anu thoughts?
Product: 37% HCL
Tank: 6500 gal HDPE tank
There is an venting "study" where an engineering company studied the potential internal pressures and ACFM while loading HCL from a tanker truck into the storage tank. You can find this study on PolyProcessing's website. They suggest that ASTM D1998 tanks are designed to 10" W.C. internal pressure. Some of the people I have asked quotes for that sell D1998 tanks are balking at us asking for a tank capable of 10" W.C. internal pressure. In a nutshell, the study calculates the recommended "vent" size which in most cases is 6". The more simple fume scrubber is a small pot off to the side with water inside and the 6" vent coming off the top of the HCL tank is submerged in 6" of water. This automatically makes the internal tank pressure have to rise above 6" W.C. to get any flow of fumes into the scrubber. This is where the rub is.....
Section 1.2 of D1998-06 specifically states that the standard does not apply if the tank is for use at any pressures other than atmospheric pressure.
Section 1.3 says "Special design considerations not covered in this specification shall be given to vessels subject to super imposed mechanical forces.......; and vessels subject to superimposed pressures exceeding 10 in. of water."
If I take it literally, any internal pressure that is not exactly equal to atmospheric..... requires some "special design consideration" and hence.... isn't covered by D1998.
I don't actually think that is exactly what they intended.
Anu thoughts?