AtleK
Petroleum
- May 14, 2007
- 15
I'm working on project where LNG shall be gasified. To achieve this, we use a shell&tube heat exchanger to heat the pressurized LNG from -155 degC to 10 degC, where the natural gas is in gaseous state. The LNG is on the tube side of the exchanger.
On the shell side we use a water/glycol mix as heating medium. This liquid is run in a closed loop with pumps providing the circulation. It is heated with HP steam (22 barg) and cooled in the LNG heater.
The problem is: Need there be a PSV on the shell side of the LNG heater? I can imagine the steam system running at the same time the LNG is stopped, may cause a situation where the water/glycol may overheat and start boiling... Is this far fetched? Do we actually need a PSV?
To cater for tube rupture, I believe a rupture disk would suffice.
Any thoughts?
If the problem is not enough defined, please tell, and I will expand.
On the shell side we use a water/glycol mix as heating medium. This liquid is run in a closed loop with pumps providing the circulation. It is heated with HP steam (22 barg) and cooled in the LNG heater.
The problem is: Need there be a PSV on the shell side of the LNG heater? I can imagine the steam system running at the same time the LNG is stopped, may cause a situation where the water/glycol may overheat and start boiling... Is this far fetched? Do we actually need a PSV?
To cater for tube rupture, I believe a rupture disk would suffice.
Any thoughts?
If the problem is not enough defined, please tell, and I will expand.