DtotheJ
Chemical
- Jul 23, 2010
- 4
The refinery I work for has built a storage tank for Isomerate gasoline, which must be maintained below 70°F to abide by EPA emissions regulations.
The tank is a "tank within a tank" with the outer tank serving as the secondary containment. The inner tank has a diameter of 110' and height of 72'. The outer containment diameter is 120' and height is 64'. The outer containment has a shed roof seal welded to the inner tank to prevent rain water from filling the containment annulus.
The tank has an internal floating roof.
I have assumed some green-house effect inside the annulus and estimated a temperature of 120°F inside (on the hottest summer day). I have calculated that the heat gain from conduction/convection at these conditions is about 3MMBtu/hr (assuming all surfaces are wetted, which is conservative). If 4" of insulation are added, this is reduced to 0.35 MMBtu/hr.
It is not realistic to install a chiller for the 3MM case, but insulation is very expensive.
My main question is where would I get the most "bang for my buck". By insulating the inner tank inside the annulus? Or by insulating the roof and tank area above the annulus?
I am aware that the effects of radiation are to the 4th power, but the tank will be painted white, and I just can't see good heat transfer through the vapor space of the gasoline.
Anyone with some experience in this would be very helpful in this discussion! And I will follow up on this thread with operating data once the tank is commissioned. This seems to be a popular and tricky beast for many! Thank you.
Regards,
Dave
The tank is a "tank within a tank" with the outer tank serving as the secondary containment. The inner tank has a diameter of 110' and height of 72'. The outer containment diameter is 120' and height is 64'. The outer containment has a shed roof seal welded to the inner tank to prevent rain water from filling the containment annulus.
The tank has an internal floating roof.
I have assumed some green-house effect inside the annulus and estimated a temperature of 120°F inside (on the hottest summer day). I have calculated that the heat gain from conduction/convection at these conditions is about 3MMBtu/hr (assuming all surfaces are wetted, which is conservative). If 4" of insulation are added, this is reduced to 0.35 MMBtu/hr.
It is not realistic to install a chiller for the 3MM case, but insulation is very expensive.
My main question is where would I get the most "bang for my buck". By insulating the inner tank inside the annulus? Or by insulating the roof and tank area above the annulus?
I am aware that the effects of radiation are to the 4th power, but the tank will be painted white, and I just can't see good heat transfer through the vapor space of the gasoline.
Anyone with some experience in this would be very helpful in this discussion! And I will follow up on this thread with operating data once the tank is commissioned. This seems to be a popular and tricky beast for many! Thank you.
Regards,
Dave