moodyj2000
Mechanical
- Feb 15, 2022
- 2
I wanted to see if someone with more experience in steam safety valve piping design could point me in the right direction. I do MEP work and have for 25 years. Typically we route the discharge of a steam safety directly to the exterior of a building without headering them together. I have had two projects lately where the mechanical contractor has requested headering the discharges due to limited availability of discharge locations.
I have done the research to the point of absolute mind numbness on headered vent piping. Can someone point to the relevent codes, design guides, etc.. that would address headered steam safety relief discharge piping? The issue I am having is what is applicable to 1) steam and 2) headered discharge piping. I can find a thousand references for how to size reliefs (which I don't need) but nothing that clearly defines a path for a safe design.
A little background on one of them. It is an existing site where the discharge of the relif valves on the downstream side of a PRV station is sized for 10" and is routed about 150 feet to atmosphere. Set pressure on these is 70 pisg. There are also two steam-to-steam generators that have shell side relief valves connected to this system. These two generators have a shell pressure of 15 psig and the reliefs are set at 35 psig. The contractor wants to add two more steam-to-steam generators to this arrangement with the same set pressures. My gut is that everything will be okay becuase the shell side of the generators is separated from the steam leaving the prv (which is on the tube side) so actuation of all safeties at the same time is improbable. For this to occur the PRV and control valve on the inlet of the generators would have to fail simultaneously. Gut feelings, however, don't save you when things blow apart.
I am willing to do the leg work. Just looking to other experts for input.
I have done the research to the point of absolute mind numbness on headered vent piping. Can someone point to the relevent codes, design guides, etc.. that would address headered steam safety relief discharge piping? The issue I am having is what is applicable to 1) steam and 2) headered discharge piping. I can find a thousand references for how to size reliefs (which I don't need) but nothing that clearly defines a path for a safe design.
A little background on one of them. It is an existing site where the discharge of the relif valves on the downstream side of a PRV station is sized for 10" and is routed about 150 feet to atmosphere. Set pressure on these is 70 pisg. There are also two steam-to-steam generators that have shell side relief valves connected to this system. These two generators have a shell pressure of 15 psig and the reliefs are set at 35 psig. The contractor wants to add two more steam-to-steam generators to this arrangement with the same set pressures. My gut is that everything will be okay becuase the shell side of the generators is separated from the steam leaving the prv (which is on the tube side) so actuation of all safeties at the same time is improbable. For this to occur the PRV and control valve on the inlet of the generators would have to fail simultaneously. Gut feelings, however, don't save you when things blow apart.
I am willing to do the leg work. Just looking to other experts for input.