kimawi
Chemical
- Jul 27, 2008
- 21
Hi Folks,
I am working on a design of a buried pipe carrying landfill gas and I calculated that some condensate will form due to the cooling of the gas. The pipe is upstream a blower and hence the gas is under -ve pressure.
I am thinking that the condensate traps along the pipe will be expensive and difficult to install because we have to have a large liquid head (long drain leg) to overcome the vacuum in the pipe before the liquid can be drained from a low point in the pipe to a sump, so the sump will be too deep in the ground.
Is there a smarter way around this? and if we size the pipe so that the gas velocity is high >50 m/s can we get away without a condensate trap in the low points of the pipe? the condensate will eventually be collected in a knock-out drum just before the blower.
Thanks
I am working on a design of a buried pipe carrying landfill gas and I calculated that some condensate will form due to the cooling of the gas. The pipe is upstream a blower and hence the gas is under -ve pressure.
I am thinking that the condensate traps along the pipe will be expensive and difficult to install because we have to have a large liquid head (long drain leg) to overcome the vacuum in the pipe before the liquid can be drained from a low point in the pipe to a sump, so the sump will be too deep in the ground.
Is there a smarter way around this? and if we size the pipe so that the gas velocity is high >50 m/s can we get away without a condensate trap in the low points of the pipe? the condensate will eventually be collected in a knock-out drum just before the blower.
Thanks