will48
Chemical
- May 29, 2002
- 8
I'm looking at a vessel vent line, which will be used to manually depressure a vessel containing light natural gas at 100 barg to an atmospheric vent header. The line is equipped with a restriction orifice and downstream of the RO passes via several collection headers, all of increasing size, e.g. 3" line to 8" sub-header to 24" main header. The main header for the purposes of my calc is assumed initially at atmospheric pressure, and I'm estimating the built-up backpressure to the RO. The gas flow is limited by the RO, but can reach sonic velocity in one or more of the downstream lines. Assuming critical flow across the orifice (i.e. flowrate not affected by downstream pressure), what happens to the pressure at the sudden line size increases?
Do I have:
(a) max orifice flow, with pressures dictated by sonic flow limit, and pressure discontinuity at the line size change? Or,
(b) a continuous pressure curve (albeit 'lumpy') with the orifice flow limited by sonic flow in any section?
In other words:
(a) flowrate is dictated by orifice; sonic flow at end of each increasing line section; pressure discontinuous at line size increases
(b) pressure is continuous, flow is much reduced due to sonic velocity in the max line size
Do I have:
(a) max orifice flow, with pressures dictated by sonic flow limit, and pressure discontinuity at the line size change? Or,
(b) a continuous pressure curve (albeit 'lumpy') with the orifice flow limited by sonic flow in any section?
In other words:
(a) flowrate is dictated by orifice; sonic flow at end of each increasing line section; pressure discontinuous at line size increases
(b) pressure is continuous, flow is much reduced due to sonic velocity in the max line size