Amphoteric
Chemical
- Jul 25, 2007
- 23
Hello,
I've just started working through my first relief project and am getting conflicting advice sizing relief valve lines. Allow me to explain with a hypothetical example, because I'd like to learn the general principle/approach instead of just getting through a single problem:
Say I have several relief scenarios. I perform my calculations with the help of API 520 and determine the following loads and minimum orifice areas:
w1 = 100 lb/hr, a1_req = 0.2 in2
w2 = 1000 lb/hr, a2_req = 4 in2
w3 = 1200 lb/hr, a3_req = 3.7 in2
Conclude: Scenario 2 governs.
Then, I find a table of orifice sizes like Since I need 4 in2, I take the next larger size, an "N" orifice (a_act = 4.340 in2).
My next step is to size the relief valve's inlet line (from vessel to PSV), it's outlet lines (from PSV to flare header), and to report my loads to the person designing the inter-unit headers and the flare burner. If I'm using a conventional PSV, I'll want to size the lines so that during the worst possible scenario I keep the inlet line pressure drop below 3% of PSV set-pressure "Pset", and limit the backpressure on the relief valve to 10%Pset.
My question is, what load do I take when sizing the inlet and outlet lines? And what load do I report to the guy designing the flare system? Are they different?
I can see at least three options:
1) wreq = w2 = 1000 lb/hr. The load that provided the largest orifice size.
2) wreq = w2 * a_act/a2_req = 1085 lb/hr. The governing scenario, increased because the actual orifice is larger than the minimum size I calculated using API.
3) wreq = w1 * a_act/a1_req = 2017 lb/hr. The orifice is so much larger than what is required that scenario #1 actually governs.
Which is it? And it gets more complicated if the scenarios are of different phases or wildly different fluid properties. Or if scenario #1 was the fire scenario, and so generation perhaps can NEVER be as high as 2017 lb/hr...
Do I even need to considering having two relief valves, one small valve that pops early to relieve scenario 1, and a larger valve that pops later in case of scenarios 2 & 3?
Sorry for the lengthy example, but I wanted to raise all of the issues that I have been considering at once.
I've just started working through my first relief project and am getting conflicting advice sizing relief valve lines. Allow me to explain with a hypothetical example, because I'd like to learn the general principle/approach instead of just getting through a single problem:
Say I have several relief scenarios. I perform my calculations with the help of API 520 and determine the following loads and minimum orifice areas:
w1 = 100 lb/hr, a1_req = 0.2 in2
w2 = 1000 lb/hr, a2_req = 4 in2
w3 = 1200 lb/hr, a3_req = 3.7 in2
Conclude: Scenario 2 governs.
Then, I find a table of orifice sizes like Since I need 4 in2, I take the next larger size, an "N" orifice (a_act = 4.340 in2).
My next step is to size the relief valve's inlet line (from vessel to PSV), it's outlet lines (from PSV to flare header), and to report my loads to the person designing the inter-unit headers and the flare burner. If I'm using a conventional PSV, I'll want to size the lines so that during the worst possible scenario I keep the inlet line pressure drop below 3% of PSV set-pressure "Pset", and limit the backpressure on the relief valve to 10%Pset.
My question is, what load do I take when sizing the inlet and outlet lines? And what load do I report to the guy designing the flare system? Are they different?
I can see at least three options:
1) wreq = w2 = 1000 lb/hr. The load that provided the largest orifice size.
2) wreq = w2 * a_act/a2_req = 1085 lb/hr. The governing scenario, increased because the actual orifice is larger than the minimum size I calculated using API.
3) wreq = w1 * a_act/a1_req = 2017 lb/hr. The orifice is so much larger than what is required that scenario #1 actually governs.
Which is it? And it gets more complicated if the scenarios are of different phases or wildly different fluid properties. Or if scenario #1 was the fire scenario, and so generation perhaps can NEVER be as high as 2017 lb/hr...
Do I even need to considering having two relief valves, one small valve that pops early to relieve scenario 1, and a larger valve that pops later in case of scenarios 2 & 3?
Sorry for the lengthy example, but I wanted to raise all of the issues that I have been considering at once.