TomaszKruk
Civil/Environmental
- Oct 2, 2019
- 33
Hello,
I feel really dumb to be confused by this, but I started to work with liquids other than water and this whole vapor pressure thing seems to go against my previous practice.
First of all - I work mostly with pumping either industrial sewage or water from surface intakes. What it meant for me was that I should design an air valve at any major high point in the system, cause the air will be released from the liquid, and might become trapped in the system, compromising it. I never cared for vapor pressure - I assumed that water I deal with is nowhere near a perfect liquid, so "gas emission" (don't know how to put it) is expected regardless of the temperature and pressure.
Now I'm to design a relatively simple system, but for a toxic liquid that will be pumped to a tank pressurized to near atmospheric pressure with an inert gas. Any part of my pipe that is above tank's inlet nozzle elevation will have slight negative gauge pressure. The liquid is "clean" - only possible contamination it could come to contact with is the inert gas in the tanks. Since the absolute pressure in the pipe would be way above vapor pressure for the liquid - I should be ok, right? I could increase the pressure in piping by moving control valves, but I'd avoid it if unnecessary.
The line will be equipped with valves and flanges for flushing with inert gas, but these will be manually operated.
My understanding is that air bubbles will form if the pressure in my pipe falls below vapor pressure of the liquid for given temperature. Thus trapped air in hot water systems is a much bigger problem than for cold water applications. I assumed stuff like sewage and untreated water doesn't follow the same principle because of organic and inorganic matter carried by the liquid. It will release gas bubbles due to processes happening in time, as the liquid flows.
Please help
Regards,
I feel really dumb to be confused by this, but I started to work with liquids other than water and this whole vapor pressure thing seems to go against my previous practice.
First of all - I work mostly with pumping either industrial sewage or water from surface intakes. What it meant for me was that I should design an air valve at any major high point in the system, cause the air will be released from the liquid, and might become trapped in the system, compromising it. I never cared for vapor pressure - I assumed that water I deal with is nowhere near a perfect liquid, so "gas emission" (don't know how to put it) is expected regardless of the temperature and pressure.
Now I'm to design a relatively simple system, but for a toxic liquid that will be pumped to a tank pressurized to near atmospheric pressure with an inert gas. Any part of my pipe that is above tank's inlet nozzle elevation will have slight negative gauge pressure. The liquid is "clean" - only possible contamination it could come to contact with is the inert gas in the tanks. Since the absolute pressure in the pipe would be way above vapor pressure for the liquid - I should be ok, right? I could increase the pressure in piping by moving control valves, but I'd avoid it if unnecessary.
The line will be equipped with valves and flanges for flushing with inert gas, but these will be manually operated.
My understanding is that air bubbles will form if the pressure in my pipe falls below vapor pressure of the liquid for given temperature. Thus trapped air in hot water systems is a much bigger problem than for cold water applications. I assumed stuff like sewage and untreated water doesn't follow the same principle because of organic and inorganic matter carried by the liquid. It will release gas bubbles due to processes happening in time, as the liquid flows.
Please help
Regards,