Wazobia
Chemical
- Aug 24, 2006
- 23
Hello guys
First of all I apologise if this has been covered somewhere else, I have done a bit of searching but haven't seen it.
As the topic suggests, what I have is a closed loop heat transfer system which heats up process streams around an oil & gas separation facility. The HTF (Therminol fluid) system consists of a pump(duty/spare), a burner unit, a storage tank for the HTF fluid, an expansion tank, pipeline which transports the fluid around the system, and a differential pressure control valve which modulates depending on the difference in pressure on either side of the system, i.e. the supply and return headers. A sketch is attached along with this post.
As the supply temperature (and therefore heat load) of the HTF is to be constant, the flows through each consumer, (X, Y, Z on the drawing) which are controlled by temperature control valves is expected to be the same (Consumer Z, a heater used for testing well fluids, will have an intermittent operation). Flow from the pumps is to be 200m3/h, at a supply pressure of 100psig. Pressure will be lost along the distribution piping, and within the consumers (X, Y, Z). The job is to work out the pressure at the return to the pump suction and check if it is enough to match the existing suction pressure as provided by the nitrogen blanketed storage tank.
My question surrounds the pressures at the different nodes, as marked on the sketch (A, B, C, D, E, F). Pressure at A is simple enough, it's the supply pressure (in this case from the burner unit) less the pressure drop up to A, which can be taken to be 5 psi. There is some pressure drop from point A to the discharge flange of skid X due to piping, equipment and the temperature control valve. Let's take that value to be 8 psi. If the pressure drop from A to B due to the flow of 180m3/h of fluid is 5psi, what is the pressure at point B?
I hope my query isn't too confusing. What I want to know is: is the pressure at B simply due to the pressure drop between A and B? Or does it have to take into account the losses within skid X too?
Thank you
First of all I apologise if this has been covered somewhere else, I have done a bit of searching but haven't seen it.
As the topic suggests, what I have is a closed loop heat transfer system which heats up process streams around an oil & gas separation facility. The HTF (Therminol fluid) system consists of a pump(duty/spare), a burner unit, a storage tank for the HTF fluid, an expansion tank, pipeline which transports the fluid around the system, and a differential pressure control valve which modulates depending on the difference in pressure on either side of the system, i.e. the supply and return headers. A sketch is attached along with this post.
As the supply temperature (and therefore heat load) of the HTF is to be constant, the flows through each consumer, (X, Y, Z on the drawing) which are controlled by temperature control valves is expected to be the same (Consumer Z, a heater used for testing well fluids, will have an intermittent operation). Flow from the pumps is to be 200m3/h, at a supply pressure of 100psig. Pressure will be lost along the distribution piping, and within the consumers (X, Y, Z). The job is to work out the pressure at the return to the pump suction and check if it is enough to match the existing suction pressure as provided by the nitrogen blanketed storage tank.
My question surrounds the pressures at the different nodes, as marked on the sketch (A, B, C, D, E, F). Pressure at A is simple enough, it's the supply pressure (in this case from the burner unit) less the pressure drop up to A, which can be taken to be 5 psi. There is some pressure drop from point A to the discharge flange of skid X due to piping, equipment and the temperature control valve. Let's take that value to be 8 psi. If the pressure drop from A to B due to the flow of 180m3/h of fluid is 5psi, what is the pressure at point B?
I hope my query isn't too confusing. What I want to know is: is the pressure at B simply due to the pressure drop between A and B? Or does it have to take into account the losses within skid X too?
Thank you