A lot of questions:
1) What's the cause of the water hammer? A pump discharge shouldn't be hammering. Only time I've seen that is bad installs of medium consistency stock pump discharges, but your tag says Petroleum.
DN 1400 pipe at 4.5 barg and 50ºC of water. The water hammer comes from the other side of the installation.
2) What's the temperature of the service?
50ºC
3) What's the drive for an expansion joint? With it fully tied, the joint will only absorb lateral movement.
I can´t transmit the equivalent pressure to the pump connection, hence the tie rods in the direction of traction and for compression (water hammer force).
For the design of the joint I have to take into account (allowable lows, forces due to water hammer, displacements in the pump)
The ideal proposal:
- Fix with anchor support for the propose of protecting the pumps in the event of a water hammer.
My problem:
A compensator is required due to the short length of the piping and minimal flexibility of pipe and components.
We are looking into using an axially constrained type, as the thermal expansion force first has to overcome the pressure thrust force before the compensator "works" i.e. compresses to accommodate thermal displacement, so It will apply a force even greater than the pressure thrust force to work on the pump nozzle.
The pipe is thermally expanding (getting longer), so the compensator must compress (get shorter).
The tie-rods will restrain the compensator against elongation due to the pressure thrust force.
For compression of the bellows the tie-rods must not work! (See the picture you sent me: the inner nuts of the tie-rods are not tightened. If the tie-rods would restrain the bellows against compression, then the compensator would be completely useless (rigid) for using here!)
The compression of the compensator only starts as soon as the force from thermal displacement is larger than the pressure thrust force (in this direction the pressure thrust force is present because the tie-rods do not work!). After that the additional spring force (Cax·∆x) of the bellows works against the pipe displacement.
All this is not a problem as long as the other end of the compensator (here the pump nozzle) can withstand the arising reaction force. However in our case this is the problem! The pump max. axial nozzle load is not high enough if the pump is fixed to the foundation.
Thank you.