kevllt
Mechanical
- Nov 7, 2005
- 12
The sonic flow calculation is not something I do very often so I'm certainly not an expert. I read through the section of the Crane book that discusses this issue. The texts that address this issue are:
"Further decrease in the outlet pressure will not be felt upstream because the pressure wave can only travel at sonic velocity, and the "signal" will never translate upstream. The "surplus" pressure drop obtained by lowering the outlet pressure after the maximum discharge has already been reached takes place beyond the end of the pipe."
"This [sonic] velocity will occur at the outlet end or in a constricted area, when the pressure drop is sufficiently high. The pressure, temperature, and specific volume are those occurring at the point in question."
From this I would expect that the pressure at the point of sonic flow is somewhere between the supply pressure and the MAWP of the tank. I'm not sure how to find this "sonic" pressure value to use for evaluating the density.
To address my problem specifically, I need to determine the relief rate of a conservation vent in an Atmospheric Tank in the event the internal heating (40# steam) coil rupture. The saturated temperature of the 40 psig steam will not vaporize the chemical in the tank. It is assumed that at the coil tube first breakage, steam pushes pad gas out at the same volumetric flowrate as the steam flow from the broken tube. The required relief rate is assumed to be limited by the sonic velocity flow of the 40# saturated steam through the 1.5" inlet heating coil line.
Ultimately, my question is what sonic flow conditions should we use to evaluate the density of the fluid (in my particular case, the 40 psig steam) at?
Thanks.
"Further decrease in the outlet pressure will not be felt upstream because the pressure wave can only travel at sonic velocity, and the "signal" will never translate upstream. The "surplus" pressure drop obtained by lowering the outlet pressure after the maximum discharge has already been reached takes place beyond the end of the pipe."
"This [sonic] velocity will occur at the outlet end or in a constricted area, when the pressure drop is sufficiently high. The pressure, temperature, and specific volume are those occurring at the point in question."
From this I would expect that the pressure at the point of sonic flow is somewhere between the supply pressure and the MAWP of the tank. I'm not sure how to find this "sonic" pressure value to use for evaluating the density.
To address my problem specifically, I need to determine the relief rate of a conservation vent in an Atmospheric Tank in the event the internal heating (40# steam) coil rupture. The saturated temperature of the 40 psig steam will not vaporize the chemical in the tank. It is assumed that at the coil tube first breakage, steam pushes pad gas out at the same volumetric flowrate as the steam flow from the broken tube. The required relief rate is assumed to be limited by the sonic velocity flow of the 40# saturated steam through the 1.5" inlet heating coil line.
Ultimately, my question is what sonic flow conditions should we use to evaluate the density of the fluid (in my particular case, the 40 psig steam) at?
Thanks.