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disc and seat material for globe valve

disc and seat material for globe valve

disc and seat material for globe valve

(OP)
Hi
 Every body can tell me if globe valve disc and seat are 13% chrome steel. It can be stellite or it doesn't need stellite .the service of valve for sweet gas.

Thank you
farhad

RE: disc and seat material for globe valve

The process fluid is not a major factor in deciding whether your trim components need Stellite hard facing. The main factors are presence of solid contaminents and more importantly the pressure drop against which the trim is controlling.

Regards

RE: disc and seat material for globe valve

(OP)

thank you Mattc1234


 Actually My question is ,can we use ASTM105+stellite disc in globe valve   instead of %13 chrome steel +stellite disc  because fluid (gas or liquid ) touch to the  surface of the disc (stellite surface)

farhad

RE: disc and seat material for globe valve

According to the definition of valve trim in code (API 600), disc itself does not have to be 13Cr nor stellite. The disc surface only is included in trim.

If valve body/bonnet material is carbon steel, your proposal " A105 disc having stellite surface" is of course possible unless Client specification requires 13Cr disc.

RE: disc and seat material for globe valve

Normally for small bore  valves the Vendor provide us the 13cr%+stellited(hard facing) , but as the size increases the vendor cant afford to give 13%Cr and stellite disc .
  he will either provide 13%CR plated with the WCB material  or WCB + stellited upon requirement.
   for your Info the stelliting wouldnt be complete for the disc , the part which seats with the seat surface are generally stellited.

 

RE: disc and seat material for globe valve

The trim components of globe control valves would not usually be manufactured from Carbon Steel, but rather from Stainless Steels.

Stellite is a hard facing material that is applied as weld deposit overlay on another trim material like 316 SS.

So WCB /A105 carbon steels, would not typically undergo Stellite hard facing. Stelliting is not always applied to trim components, when applied in globe control valves it can either be applied to the seating faces of the plug and seat or the applied applied to all faces of the plug and internal faces of the seat, the decision on which depends upon the process conditions.

RE: disc and seat material for globe valve

Various issues being thrown about here, some needlessly so.  There are generally four primary reasons to use a stellited trim.
1) Fluid stream solids
2) Gallable materials
3) Process fluid
4) Excessive pressure drops across the trim

Fluid stream solids are an easy one, particulate matter in the fluid stream can damage trim surfaces, but thay also damage body surfaces too.  Both should be a concern even though the trim would be primary.

Gallable materials like 316 stainless steel can gall under high seat loads, stelliting one or both surfaces can make this go away or at least reduce it significantly.

Fluid stream material is a significant issue.  It was suggest that the process fluid has little impact, totally  untrue.  All other things being equal, a valve controlling nitrogen has a significanly better chance of survival that one contolling 300 deg F water.  Some materials are just naturally more abrasive.

And finally yes large pressure drops can create several different forms of cavitation type damage.  This is a very real issue and in some cases if the pressure drop is high enough using an abrasive fluid, stellite will not survive either.

After all of these issues are considered and with full application data, you can typically make a decent decision on the trim material.   I could help further if you need me too, I'd need more app data to provide a suggestion though.

  

RE: disc and seat material for globe valve

farhad:

  Actually never did I see anyone apply A105 trim for globe valve. A105 or A216 normally are used as body/bonnet & some non-contact process fluid material.

  And it is really unthinkable if someone do "WCB+stellited". I would like better change "WCB" to "WC6" or "WC9" if you need stellite.

  Basically agree with OTHGWAY points about stellite.

  I believe there is no "13% chrome plated" in the world but "chrome plated". Normally for 13%CR material(400serice SST),most famous valve companies dont stellite on it but quenching and tempering to HB270-HB290,and plated CR or Nickel if needed.And normally for austenitic SST(304/316),solution HT then stellited if needed.
  
  Finally,my suggestion is: you can not use A105+stellite, it is really bad thing, even badder than A105+Zinc plate.

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