highmarkr
Chemical
- Dec 13, 2011
- 3
I came across a closed thread about this issue and was wondering if anybody had some personal experience with this.
I am in a fairly cold climate, atleast as far as winter is concerned. On our butane spheres we have vacuum breakers set to 1.5 oz per square inch.
When it gets cold and the vapor pressure of the butane drops below atmospheric pressure, we inherently would be letting air into the tank. We now have two problems. We have incondensables in the tank, causing us to have a max limit on the level (atleast until it dissolves into the butane), otherwise we will pop the psv. We also have an oxidizer inside with the butane. Luckily the flammability limits of butane are fairly small and there is only a small temperature range where the butane is potentially flammable.
My path forward is to obtain the vacuum rating on the tanks, get vacuum breakers that are set for that limit, and to get lucky. I hope to have a high enough vacuum rating so as long as we don't have extreme record lows there is always enough vapor pressure to keep the breakers closed.
Does anyone have a different practice for this? From what I understand our current setup is a fairly normal practice, which in my mind works great in the US if your butane tanks are down south, not so much in the North.
FYI: A nitrogen or ng purge/venting system was considered, but because of the solubility in the butane, we are concerned of the consumption of the purge gas and the possible downstream issues.
Thanks for any input.
-Chad