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I am working with flash steam from a steam separator. The flash line is trapped in three locations before it takes a 90 degree turn upward to travel to a higher floor. It is trapped a fourth time just prior to the 90 degree upward turn. The is no acitivty at any of the first three traps -- no cylcing -- and the flash line is roughly horizontal. The fourth trap, however, cycles 8-9 times a minute -- it is an Armstrong 813 IB -- which translates to about 4 GAL per minute exiting the trap. If the trap vents are blown, the steam appears very dry at each of the first 3 traps, and very wet at the fourth.
The flash steam feeds a header that is also fed by a main steam line. The main line steam carries 30-40 degrees of superheat. The flash and main line steam are not mixing in the header. It appears that the flash is feeding only part of the application. The application requires dry steam. The application is responding in a fashion that suggests the steam is not dry and carrying a fair amount of condensate.
It has been suggested that the problem is condensate carry-over from the separator that fails to drop in the first three drip legs, but does so at the 90 degree up turn. Is this conceivable given the fact that the steam is dry at each of the first 3 traps ? Are there other possiblities ? Means of verifying ? It is very important to diagnose this correctly -- there is a plan to replace the separator -- can the problem lie downstream ?
Is there a book that can be suggested to use to calculate steam quality, line losses, separator size, anyhting that could help solve this problem ?
Many thanks in advance.
The flash steam feeds a header that is also fed by a main steam line. The main line steam carries 30-40 degrees of superheat. The flash and main line steam are not mixing in the header. It appears that the flash is feeding only part of the application. The application requires dry steam. The application is responding in a fashion that suggests the steam is not dry and carrying a fair amount of condensate.
It has been suggested that the problem is condensate carry-over from the separator that fails to drop in the first three drip legs, but does so at the 90 degree up turn. Is this conceivable given the fact that the steam is dry at each of the first 3 traps ? Are there other possiblities ? Means of verifying ? It is very important to diagnose this correctly -- there is a plan to replace the separator -- can the problem lie downstream ?
Is there a book that can be suggested to use to calculate steam quality, line losses, separator size, anyhting that could help solve this problem ?
Many thanks in advance.