Aldhissla
Petroleum
- Jan 16, 2013
- 2
Hi there,
I'm just new in my job and the area of business are very different to my old one. In general I do know how to design pipes and route them, but since now I never handled that kind of liquids / gases and I try to figure out where the differences are for designing pipes between "normal" fluids / gases and cryogenic / explosiv ones are.
The pipes I'm talking about is for example going from a seperator to a flare stack.
Particular I'm looking for advice about:
[ul]
[li]max. allowable velocity in pipes[/li]
[li]is there a minimum straight lengths for a pipe I have to have (without having trouble with micro particles getting in the elbow)[/li]
[li]max. allowable velocity in pipes (fluid/gaseous)oxygen[/li]
[/ul]
Hope I made myself clear enough, if not please say so and I'm happy to be more precise!
Any advice will help and thanks for that in advance!
Looking forward to read some :0)
I'm just new in my job and the area of business are very different to my old one. In general I do know how to design pipes and route them, but since now I never handled that kind of liquids / gases and I try to figure out where the differences are for designing pipes between "normal" fluids / gases and cryogenic / explosiv ones are.
The pipes I'm talking about is for example going from a seperator to a flare stack.
Particular I'm looking for advice about:
[ul]
[li]max. allowable velocity in pipes[/li]
[li]is there a minimum straight lengths for a pipe I have to have (without having trouble with micro particles getting in the elbow)[/li]
[li]max. allowable velocity in pipes (fluid/gaseous)oxygen[/li]
[/ul]
Hope I made myself clear enough, if not please say so and I'm happy to be more precise!
Any advice will help and thanks for that in advance!
Looking forward to read some :0)