Andyallovertheplace
Chemical
- Dec 5, 2011
- 2
Good Afternoon All,
Just a question, I'm trying to get a drawing right, and having moved companies, I'm having trouble laying hands on some of my resources.
My question is: What is the better arrangement for a manual blowdown station in a gas plant, assuming a globe valve and ball valve in series? Should the ball valve be upstream or downstream? It seems that having the ball valve downstream would be best if the globe valve undergoes hydrate formation, since you can close the ball valve, and the ice plug is now back under pressure, with a denser, warmer media around it to melt the plug.
Of course, the opposite has it's advantages, such as the fact that the ice plug is no longer under pressure, so it should dissipate relatively quickly, and the hydrates are forming downstream of the ball valve, so they won't interfere with the operation of the ball valve.
Thanks to anyone who can give a answer on this.
Andrew
Just a question, I'm trying to get a drawing right, and having moved companies, I'm having trouble laying hands on some of my resources.
My question is: What is the better arrangement for a manual blowdown station in a gas plant, assuming a globe valve and ball valve in series? Should the ball valve be upstream or downstream? It seems that having the ball valve downstream would be best if the globe valve undergoes hydrate formation, since you can close the ball valve, and the ice plug is now back under pressure, with a denser, warmer media around it to melt the plug.
Of course, the opposite has it's advantages, such as the fact that the ice plug is no longer under pressure, so it should dissipate relatively quickly, and the hydrates are forming downstream of the ball valve, so they won't interfere with the operation of the ball valve.
Thanks to anyone who can give a answer on this.
Andrew