jennymd
Chemical
- Jul 14, 2006
- 13
Hi guys,
I am designing a PSV to protect piping and a hairpin that heats gas from 41 deg. C (29 barg) to 288 deg.C. The PSV is going to be located in the cold inlet piping.
The case that I'm analyzing reflects a block outlet that derivates in thermal expansion of the gas.
I checked by simulation that I have a vapor phase and not a supercritical fluid @ the Pset of 37.7 barg (Paccumulation 41.5 barg).
I calculated the relieving temperature using the following expression derived from the ideal gas law:
To = Po / P x T (eq.1)
were
P = Operating Pressure
T = Temperature
Po = PSV Relieving Pressure
To = Relief Temperature
I'm looking for fundamental information that relates the Ideal Gas Law with the duty equation (Q = m x Cp x DeltaT), in order to determine the RELIEF FLOW.
Basically I need confirmation of this derivation (of if you know about another methodology):
dP/dt = d(Z N R T / V)/dt = 0
= Z R / V * d(N T)/dt = 0
d(NT)/dt = N dT/dt + T dN/dt = 0
= N Q / N Cp + T dN/dt = 0
dN/dt = - Q / T / Cp
Thanks for your time,
JD
I am designing a PSV to protect piping and a hairpin that heats gas from 41 deg. C (29 barg) to 288 deg.C. The PSV is going to be located in the cold inlet piping.
The case that I'm analyzing reflects a block outlet that derivates in thermal expansion of the gas.
I checked by simulation that I have a vapor phase and not a supercritical fluid @ the Pset of 37.7 barg (Paccumulation 41.5 barg).
I calculated the relieving temperature using the following expression derived from the ideal gas law:
To = Po / P x T (eq.1)
were
P = Operating Pressure
T = Temperature
Po = PSV Relieving Pressure
To = Relief Temperature
I'm looking for fundamental information that relates the Ideal Gas Law with the duty equation (Q = m x Cp x DeltaT), in order to determine the RELIEF FLOW.
Basically I need confirmation of this derivation (of if you know about another methodology):
dP/dt = d(Z N R T / V)/dt = 0
= Z R / V * d(N T)/dt = 0
d(NT)/dt = N dT/dt + T dN/dt = 0
= N Q / N Cp + T dN/dt = 0
dN/dt = - Q / T / Cp
Thanks for your time,
JD