PrudhoeBayAK
Chemical
- Mar 14, 2002
- 3
I have a 2"x3" pilot operated PSV (AGCO model 4731023/S/NACE) set at 100 psig, with a normal system operating pressure of ~35 psig. The PSV discharges into a common flare header, which has several other PSVs and blowdown valves tie-ing into the header in close vicinity of the 2x3 valve discharge. The flare header discharge point is several hundred feet of pipe away from these PSVs/BD-valves.
The PSV protects the shell side of Shell (MEG, MAWP of 220 psig, Op P ~35 psig) and Tube (HP Fuel Gas, Op Press ~600psig) HX for a tube rupture scenario.
When the plant has an ESD there is a blowdown valve that "spikes" the common flare header, which can/has seen anywhere from 50 - 300 psig (estimated from various models and observation). During these ESD events we have had several incidents where the PSV has lifted and effectively emptied the MEG system volume, without the system side (shell) pressure ever coming near the PSV setpoint. We think the PSV might be lifting due to the pressure spike on the discharge side.
My questions are:
Is our theory of backpressure surges lifting a pilot operated PSV valid?
Why the PSV does not reseat, is another mystery as well - perhaps a siphoning effect?
Are there any modifications we can make to a pilot operated valve that will prevent these incidents from happening again? We can't "afford" another "not-for-cause" MEG release.
Thanks!
PBAK
The PSV protects the shell side of Shell (MEG, MAWP of 220 psig, Op P ~35 psig) and Tube (HP Fuel Gas, Op Press ~600psig) HX for a tube rupture scenario.
When the plant has an ESD there is a blowdown valve that "spikes" the common flare header, which can/has seen anywhere from 50 - 300 psig (estimated from various models and observation). During these ESD events we have had several incidents where the PSV has lifted and effectively emptied the MEG system volume, without the system side (shell) pressure ever coming near the PSV setpoint. We think the PSV might be lifting due to the pressure spike on the discharge side.
My questions are:
Is our theory of backpressure surges lifting a pilot operated PSV valid?
Why the PSV does not reseat, is another mystery as well - perhaps a siphoning effect?
Are there any modifications we can make to a pilot operated valve that will prevent these incidents from happening again? We can't "afford" another "not-for-cause" MEG release.
Thanks!
PBAK