Hi everybody,
Currently I am designing the relief system for a gas plant, my question is about the relieving temperature in fire case.
The vessel I am protecting is protected at the top of the rating 600#, the operationg temperature is 90°F, then I set the design temperature 50°F above (140°F) and the corresponding design pressure is 1432 psig (following the tables of the API B16.5). However, the operating pressure is around 326 psig. The vessel must be designed at rating 600# because there is a chance to feed the plant with additional high pressure streams further.
The whole system is protected upstream by a PSV for blocked outlet case, then, the vessel mentioned must only be protected by fire case.
While determining the relieving temperature (Eq 11. API 521 2007) with a pressure set point at 1432 psig, the result was high enough to realize that when reaching the pressure set point, the vessel was already melted. Then, I decreased the pressure set point (then the relieving temperature was reduced) to find a point where the pressure and temperature coincident for rating 600# met the relieving pressure and temperature.
The results are:
Relieving pressure: 759 psig
Set Point Pressure: 627 psig
Relieving Temperature: 819 °F
With these conditions defined I followed to size the relief load (Eq 12. API 521 2007) and then the orifice size (Eq 2. API 520 Part I 2008) and I realized that at increasing relieving temperature the orifice size gets smaller.
After all this tale, my concerns are:
- The way I determined the relieving pressure and temperature is adequate or is there another better way to do it?
- I don't fully understand the physical effect why the increasing relieving temperature decreases the PSV orifice size.
Thank you in advance for all the help you can give me, I know the subject is kind of confusing so I'll give you further information if needed.
Best regards,
Eduardo Sánchez
Process Engineer
Currently I am designing the relief system for a gas plant, my question is about the relieving temperature in fire case.
The vessel I am protecting is protected at the top of the rating 600#, the operationg temperature is 90°F, then I set the design temperature 50°F above (140°F) and the corresponding design pressure is 1432 psig (following the tables of the API B16.5). However, the operating pressure is around 326 psig. The vessel must be designed at rating 600# because there is a chance to feed the plant with additional high pressure streams further.
The whole system is protected upstream by a PSV for blocked outlet case, then, the vessel mentioned must only be protected by fire case.
While determining the relieving temperature (Eq 11. API 521 2007) with a pressure set point at 1432 psig, the result was high enough to realize that when reaching the pressure set point, the vessel was already melted. Then, I decreased the pressure set point (then the relieving temperature was reduced) to find a point where the pressure and temperature coincident for rating 600# met the relieving pressure and temperature.
The results are:
Relieving pressure: 759 psig
Set Point Pressure: 627 psig
Relieving Temperature: 819 °F
With these conditions defined I followed to size the relief load (Eq 12. API 521 2007) and then the orifice size (Eq 2. API 520 Part I 2008) and I realized that at increasing relieving temperature the orifice size gets smaller.
After all this tale, my concerns are:
- The way I determined the relieving pressure and temperature is adequate or is there another better way to do it?
- I don't fully understand the physical effect why the increasing relieving temperature decreases the PSV orifice size.
Thank you in advance for all the help you can give me, I know the subject is kind of confusing so I'll give you further information if needed.
Best regards,
Eduardo Sánchez
Process Engineer