There is very little in "standards" other than company guidelines and good practice. That's kind of what I meant by saying your initial manifold should be a short as possible and clearly any dead legs on the system from that point onwards should be eliminated or reduced to a minimum. There was always an issue about what you did with the pig traps if you had a pig trap full of one product, but didn't want to drain it away.
Basically, keep it as a single pipe from the tank without tees, branches etc unti you get ot the manifold where you want everything (valves, tees etc) as close together as you can to reduce dead legs. Aviation should be at the back of the manifold so that it sweeps all other liquids before it, thus reducing the potential for contamination. Aviation needs separate inlet and outlet piping and you can't flow in while you're flowing out - you can for diesel(gas-oil) and petrol(gasoline).
I have some fuel piping guidelines squirreled away somewhere (on paper), but the above is the essence of it.
What you need to do is look closely at the actual piping layounts and designs when they are produced, because lots of piping engineers will not see the little note on the P & IDs which says "dead legs to be avoided / kept to a minimum distance"... The company I used to work for who ship lots of aviation and multi product, always used to use Orbit Truseal valves - see
or search for them. Great isolation valves which could also auto bleed as part of the closure mechanism and alarm if product kept flowing.
My motto: Learn something new every day
Also: There's usually a good reason why everyone does it that way