OilBoiler
Chemical
- Aug 5, 2003
- 43
Hey everyone,
I'm working on designing a vapor recovery system for three API 650 resid tanks that are nitrogen-blanketed. There are two existing tanks that have a system already and I'm checking my design basis against the existing one (they are the same exact tanks) and the flowrates differ greatly, that's why I wanted to check with all of you if I'm doing it right. All the tanks should have the same regime of filling and emptying. These tanks I'm looking at already have vacuum vents that address any inbreathing/outbreathing requirements, but I'm currently calculating the maximum vapor rate I will be having whenever the tanks are filling. I'm assuming that the gases are pretty much 100% nitrogen (is that a correct assumption, since they are nitrogen-blanketed?)This is how I'm calculating it:
1. With the tank levels available through the DCS, I'm calculating the volume rate of the gas displaced whenever the tanks are filled from one specific level to another using the ideal gas law. For instance, the level goes from 4 ft to 30 ft in 3 days, I get a certain volumetric rate of gas displaced in ACFH.
2. From the actual volumetric flowrate, I use the ideal gas law and get lbmoles/hr.
3. Then I convert it to SCFH.
In order to establish my design basis, I look at the trends and by going through the same calculation process, I decide what are the minimum, normal, and maximum vapor flows.
Is this how we calculate tank vapor flowrates based on liquid movement? Because this is resid, with a very high molecular weight and very low vapor pressure, the design for the other two existing tanks assumed that there was no thermal venting. I appreciate very much your feedback. Thank you!
I'm working on designing a vapor recovery system for three API 650 resid tanks that are nitrogen-blanketed. There are two existing tanks that have a system already and I'm checking my design basis against the existing one (they are the same exact tanks) and the flowrates differ greatly, that's why I wanted to check with all of you if I'm doing it right. All the tanks should have the same regime of filling and emptying. These tanks I'm looking at already have vacuum vents that address any inbreathing/outbreathing requirements, but I'm currently calculating the maximum vapor rate I will be having whenever the tanks are filling. I'm assuming that the gases are pretty much 100% nitrogen (is that a correct assumption, since they are nitrogen-blanketed?)This is how I'm calculating it:
1. With the tank levels available through the DCS, I'm calculating the volume rate of the gas displaced whenever the tanks are filled from one specific level to another using the ideal gas law. For instance, the level goes from 4 ft to 30 ft in 3 days, I get a certain volumetric rate of gas displaced in ACFH.
2. From the actual volumetric flowrate, I use the ideal gas law and get lbmoles/hr.
3. Then I convert it to SCFH.
In order to establish my design basis, I look at the trends and by going through the same calculation process, I decide what are the minimum, normal, and maximum vapor flows.
Is this how we calculate tank vapor flowrates based on liquid movement? Because this is resid, with a very high molecular weight and very low vapor pressure, the design for the other two existing tanks assumed that there was no thermal venting. I appreciate very much your feedback. Thank you!