tankerator
Mechanical
- Oct 29, 2009
- 13
Hello, I’ve got a question on over pressuring of a tank. I have a small (app. J, API 650) tank that requires a N2 blanket. According to the company standards, our regulators must fail open in order to keep the blanket. The design condition that I’m getting off of the old valve datasheets is 200 psig. That poses an issue for this tank, which is only designed for 1.5”WC. The flow is not horribly high at 1200 scfh. The tank has a small, 4” pressure/vacuum vent that is set for about 1”WC.
At first I thought I could treat the N2 as an ideal gas (neglecting temperature changes, auto-refrigeration) and set P1*V1 = P2*V2. Taking the length component of volume to be equal and reducing the equation to
P1*A1 = P2*A2
Using
P1 = 200 psi,
A1 = 0.864 in2 (area of 1” pipe coming in to tank),
A2 = 12.73 in2 (area of 4” outlet/PV vent)
I still get the pressure equaling about 13.6 psi which is obviously too much for the tank.
What this analysis does not include is the flow rate. Say, for example, there is a pinhole orifice that is leaking a small amount into the tank, but the pressure upstream is 200psi. The vent would obviously be able to handle that because the flow is so small. How do I incorporate the flow into the analysis? Is this a Bernoulli’s equation based problem?
Also, does anyone know where I can find N2 tables?
Thanks for the help.
Matt
At first I thought I could treat the N2 as an ideal gas (neglecting temperature changes, auto-refrigeration) and set P1*V1 = P2*V2. Taking the length component of volume to be equal and reducing the equation to
P1*A1 = P2*A2
Using
P1 = 200 psi,
A1 = 0.864 in2 (area of 1” pipe coming in to tank),
A2 = 12.73 in2 (area of 4” outlet/PV vent)
I still get the pressure equaling about 13.6 psi which is obviously too much for the tank.
What this analysis does not include is the flow rate. Say, for example, there is a pinhole orifice that is leaking a small amount into the tank, but the pressure upstream is 200psi. The vent would obviously be able to handle that because the flow is so small. How do I incorporate the flow into the analysis? Is this a Bernoulli’s equation based problem?
Also, does anyone know where I can find N2 tables?
Thanks for the help.
Matt