gjmorin
Mechanical
- Aug 18, 2011
- 5
Hi all:
I'm working on a refinery unit that has a vessel at Deck 12 that'll need to have its dry adsorbent pellets removed once or twice per year as it is spent. This is a new feature on this type of unit, so we don't have specific operating experience.
As we can't be assured the material will flow well and a manual unloading operation would be a pain in the --- (plus throw adsorbent down 11 decks and everywhere else if it happens to be windy), we were thinking that providing a dedicated vacuum line up the structure with a couple connections at top for a hose and a connection for s vacuum truck at the bottom would be advisable.
I'm a little concerned with pressure drop in the line and hose however. We'll have the hose from the truck, 200 ft (60m) of pipe, and then a hose on the vessel side. We'll need to lift the material from the height of the bottom manway, through the top manway, and up to the connection on the vacuum header - call it 20 ft (6m).
Presumably once I lift the material the 20ft, I'll have gravity in my favor and the material will move down to the bottom, but I'm unsure of the calculation method I'd use to confirm I can:
a) have adequate suction at the end of the hose to lift the material
b) be able to convey the material in a hose up 20'
Can anyone point me toward a reference or methodology that we could use to confirm that this'll work? Conversely, can anyone see a consideration / flaw I haven't thought of that would make this unworkable?
Thanks
Greg
I'm working on a refinery unit that has a vessel at Deck 12 that'll need to have its dry adsorbent pellets removed once or twice per year as it is spent. This is a new feature on this type of unit, so we don't have specific operating experience.
As we can't be assured the material will flow well and a manual unloading operation would be a pain in the --- (plus throw adsorbent down 11 decks and everywhere else if it happens to be windy), we were thinking that providing a dedicated vacuum line up the structure with a couple connections at top for a hose and a connection for s vacuum truck at the bottom would be advisable.
I'm a little concerned with pressure drop in the line and hose however. We'll have the hose from the truck, 200 ft (60m) of pipe, and then a hose on the vessel side. We'll need to lift the material from the height of the bottom manway, through the top manway, and up to the connection on the vacuum header - call it 20 ft (6m).
Presumably once I lift the material the 20ft, I'll have gravity in my favor and the material will move down to the bottom, but I'm unsure of the calculation method I'd use to confirm I can:
a) have adequate suction at the end of the hose to lift the material
b) be able to convey the material in a hose up 20'
Can anyone point me toward a reference or methodology that we could use to confirm that this'll work? Conversely, can anyone see a consideration / flaw I haven't thought of that would make this unworkable?
Thanks
Greg