Iradah
Chemical
- May 31, 2011
- 66
Hello all, I need your urgent help on this.
We got a stuck pig in our 6" Butane transferring pipeline of 30 km length. The pig is stuck and blocking the line but allowing for our daily production flow to pass through the very small areas around it (the pig is not 100% sealing the diameter of the pipeline). We want to push this pig out of the pipeline by applying large delta P across it. The inlet pressure to the pipeline is coming from a centrifugal pump. The outlet pressure at the other side is controlled by a pressure control valve to maintain the liquid state of butane.
The proposal was to drop the pressure downstream the pig to atmospheric by flaring. I was trying to know how much flow we will get at this delta P assuming the upstream pressure will not change.
I can see that keeping the upstream pressure constant, Butane will total evaporate at pressures below its vapor pressure and a chocked flow will be created.
My question is what will happen once we reduce the pressure downstream to atmospheric:
1. No change will be observed at upstream conditions, the pressure and flow will remain the same as no more flow can pass through the restricted area, liquid will be evaporating at this area which will cause cavitation and damage to the pig and pipeline?
OR:
2. The upstream pressure will be the same but the flow will decrease to the quantity that can pass through the restriction without being chocked, however, still flashing will occur at the restricted area?
OR:
3. The upstream pressure will increase to the maximum the pump differential head allows for and the flow will be decreased to the chocking limit?
I appreciate your urgent help on viewing what will happen to the upstream conditions, what flow and pressure changes will happen when I drop the pressure downstream in comparison to the conditions just before reaching the maximum flow (Chocking conditions). Also, what risks are associated with this high delta P and flashing to the pipeline.
We got a stuck pig in our 6" Butane transferring pipeline of 30 km length. The pig is stuck and blocking the line but allowing for our daily production flow to pass through the very small areas around it (the pig is not 100% sealing the diameter of the pipeline). We want to push this pig out of the pipeline by applying large delta P across it. The inlet pressure to the pipeline is coming from a centrifugal pump. The outlet pressure at the other side is controlled by a pressure control valve to maintain the liquid state of butane.
The proposal was to drop the pressure downstream the pig to atmospheric by flaring. I was trying to know how much flow we will get at this delta P assuming the upstream pressure will not change.
I can see that keeping the upstream pressure constant, Butane will total evaporate at pressures below its vapor pressure and a chocked flow will be created.
My question is what will happen once we reduce the pressure downstream to atmospheric:
1. No change will be observed at upstream conditions, the pressure and flow will remain the same as no more flow can pass through the restricted area, liquid will be evaporating at this area which will cause cavitation and damage to the pig and pipeline?
OR:
2. The upstream pressure will be the same but the flow will decrease to the quantity that can pass through the restriction without being chocked, however, still flashing will occur at the restricted area?
OR:
3. The upstream pressure will increase to the maximum the pump differential head allows for and the flow will be decreased to the chocking limit?
I appreciate your urgent help on viewing what will happen to the upstream conditions, what flow and pressure changes will happen when I drop the pressure downstream in comparison to the conditions just before reaching the maximum flow (Chocking conditions). Also, what risks are associated with this high delta P and flashing to the pipeline.