posershadow
Chemical
- Nov 30, 2018
- 5
I've noticed quite a few U-stamped shell and tube heat exchangers designed to BPVC.VIII.1-2017 that list the external MAWP of the inner chamber (tubeside) as either N/A or 15 psig on the U-1 form (line 16). I've seen it across the board with a wide range of shellside and tubeside design pressures. In addition, these heat exchangers were not manufactured by small no name manufacturers, in all cases these are TEMA members supplying these.
I figured I'd take one heat exchanger as an example:
Shellside internal design pressure 1100 psig, internal MAWP 1114 psig, external MAWP 15 psig and normal operating pressure of 750 psig
Tubeside internal design pressure 200 psig, internal MAWP 431 psig, external MAWP 15 psig and normal operating pressure of 50 psig
Is it acceptable to list the tubeside external MAWP as 15 psig? Doesn't that completely go against UG-28(e)? If this is permissible, what section of Code do I need to be looking at?
Lets say I flip the shellside and tubeside pressures in the example above. Now the tubeside normal operating pressure is much higher than the shellside. In that case I see many manufacturers listing N/A for the tubeside external MAWP. Is that permissible? I suppose it could be... so, the way I'm interpreting that is that under no circumstance am I allowed to let the tubeside pressure drop below the shellside pressure. We have instances where the tubeside might be depressurized due to some maintenance on surrounding equipment but the shellside remains pressurized. That scenario seems to be unacceptable in the eyes of UG-28(e) if the tubeside external MAWP is N/A.
I figured I'd take one heat exchanger as an example:
Shellside internal design pressure 1100 psig, internal MAWP 1114 psig, external MAWP 15 psig and normal operating pressure of 750 psig
Tubeside internal design pressure 200 psig, internal MAWP 431 psig, external MAWP 15 psig and normal operating pressure of 50 psig
Is it acceptable to list the tubeside external MAWP as 15 psig? Doesn't that completely go against UG-28(e)? If this is permissible, what section of Code do I need to be looking at?
Lets say I flip the shellside and tubeside pressures in the example above. Now the tubeside normal operating pressure is much higher than the shellside. In that case I see many manufacturers listing N/A for the tubeside external MAWP. Is that permissible? I suppose it could be... so, the way I'm interpreting that is that under no circumstance am I allowed to let the tubeside pressure drop below the shellside pressure. We have instances where the tubeside might be depressurized due to some maintenance on surrounding equipment but the shellside remains pressurized. That scenario seems to be unacceptable in the eyes of UG-28(e) if the tubeside external MAWP is N/A.