Jump to content



Featured Articles

Check out the latest featured articles.

File Library

Check out the latest downloads available in the File Library.

New Article

Product Viscosity vs. Shear

Featured File

Vertical Tank Selection

New Blog Entry

Low Flow in Pipes- posted in Ankur's blog

Discharge Temperature Of Safety Valve


This topic has been archived. This means that you cannot reply to this topic.
6 replies to this topic
Share this topic:
| More

#1 prasad54

prasad54

    Junior Member

  • Members
  • 10 posts

Posted 06 February 2009 - 07:38 AM

Hello Everyone,

I am sizing a PSV on a vessel containing ethylene, the flowrate to be dischagred by this valve is 6500 kg/hr due to instrument failure. the design pressure of the vessel and the set pressure of the vessel is 7 barg and the operating and design temp. of the vessel is 40deg.C and 170deg.C

I am confused what will be discharge temperature........

Thanks in advance.......

#2 Andrei

Andrei

    Gold Member

  • Members
  • 174 posts

Posted 06 February 2009 - 08:54 AM

prasad,

You do not specify the discharge destination of your valve, the design case of your valve and also what type of PSV we are talking about.

I think you should determine first ethylene temperature inside your vessel at relief conditions. This will depend on your design case. Since ethylene is vapor at the conditions you indicated I am assuming that most probably your design case is not fire but some kind of blocked flow due to utility/equipment/instrumentation failure. So your PSV inlet relief temperature is normal operating temperature, 40 ºC in your case.

You should determine next what is your discharge back-pressure. For a conventional type of PSV your maximum back-pressure should be 10% of your set pressure, so max. 0.7 barg in your case. Using a simulator, or other way, you can do a depressurization calculation across the valve. You have pressure and temperature upstream and pressure downstream, you should be able to calculate the temperature downstream. I am calculating about 34 ºC for this back pressure and about 33.3 ºC when your discharge is at atmospheric conditions.

So, for a conventional type of PSV your discharge temperature should be between 33.3 and 34 ºC.

You should now see the actual configuration of your discharge line and calculate your actual pressure drop considering of course the actual discharge destination point pressure. You should get a back-pressure of max. 10% of the set pressure for a conventional valve, otherwise you have to change the discharge configuration or use a different type of PSV.

And of course you have to use the exact composition of your gas. I am assuming that you are dealing with 100% ethylene when I am giving those values.


#3 fallah

fallah

    Gold Member

  • ChE Plus Subscriber
  • 5,019 posts

Posted 06 February 2009 - 09:25 AM

QUOTE (prasad54 @ Feb 6 2009, 08:38 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Hello Everyone,

I am sizing a PSV on a vessel containing ethylene, the flowrate to be dischagred by this valve is 6500 kg/hr due to instrument failure. the design pressure of the vessel and the set pressure of the vessel is 7 barg and the operating and design temp. of the vessel is 40deg.C and 170deg.C

I am confused what will be discharge temperature........

Thanks in advance.......

As per API 521:
T1=(P1/Pn)*Tn
Where:
T1 Relief absolute Temperature®
P1 Relief Pressure or Design Pressure+Overpressure (absolute psi)
Pn Operating Pressure(absolute psi)
Tn Operating absolute Temperature®

#4 Andrei

Andrei

    Gold Member

  • Members
  • 174 posts

Posted 06 February 2009 - 01:07 PM

QUOTE (fallah @ Feb 6 2009, 09:25 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
QUOTE (prasad54 @ Feb 6 2009, 08:38 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Hello Everyone,

I am sizing a PSV on a vessel containing ethylene, the flowrate to be dischagred by this valve is 6500 kg/hr due to instrument failure. the design pressure of the vessel and the set pressure of the vessel is 7 barg and the operating and design temp. of the vessel is 40deg.C and 170deg.C

I am confused what will be discharge temperature........

Thanks in advance.......

As per API 521:
T1=(P1/Pn)*Tn
Where:
T1 Relief absolute Temperature®
P1 Relief Pressure or Design Pressure+Overpressure (absolute psi)
Pn Operating Pressure(absolute psi)
Tn Operating absolute Temperature®


Fallah,

Here is API definition for T1: "The gas absolute temperature, at the upstream relieving pressure, determined from equation (11)", the one you are listing.
I thought the question was about the discharge temperature, so downstream of PSV.
And the entire paragraph refers specifically to fire cases; we don't know is that's the case.




#5 prasad54

prasad54

    Junior Member

  • Members
  • 10 posts

Posted 06 February 2009 - 05:15 PM

Hello Fallah and Andrei,

Many thanks for your answers and sujjestions..........

#6 fallah

fallah

    Gold Member

  • ChE Plus Subscriber
  • 5,019 posts

Posted 07 February 2009 - 03:03 AM

QUOTE (Andrei @ Feb 6 2009, 02:07 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Fallah,

Here is API definition for T1: "The gas absolute temperature, at the upstream relieving pressure, determined from equation (11)", the one you are listing.
I thought the question was about the discharge temperature, so downstream of PSV.
And the entire paragraph refers specifically to fire cases; we don't know is that's the case.


Andrei,

Regarding the matter that the question was about the discharge temperature,you are right.But i think the discharge temperature would be obtained by modelling the gas through PSV as isentropic expantion with around 70% efficiency (due to isentalpic expantion between PSV nozzle and PSV outlet).

I think,because of fixed volume of vessel,the equation of API 521 that i mentioned would be applicable for the case described by Prasad54.Other che jedies are kindly requested to submit their viewpoint in this regard.


#7 JoeWong

JoeWong

    Gold Member

  • ChE Plus Subscriber
  • 1,223 posts

Posted 12 February 2009 - 05:02 AM

In my opinion,

- PSV upstream temperature may consider constant density method to derive the temperature.
- PSV downstream temperature may consider isenthalpic expansion (just sufficient).




Similar Topics