kyu
Chemical
- Mar 20, 2003
- 9
Hi all,
I am looking at a relief valve that has been installed downstream of a high pressure cylinder. The cylinder contains a gas at a pressure of roughly 2400 psig. The cylinder is hooked up to a regulator that lets the pressure down to approximately 100 psig.
We have a relief valve downstream of the regulator to protect the downstream equipment in the instance that the regulator fails in the wide-open position.
I want to work out how much flow the relief valve will be required to handle. In order to do this, I need to know what the pressure upstream of the regulator will be.
Originally, I thought only of using the service pressure (2400 psig), but I have recently been wondering if perhaps it might make sense to use a fire-scenario pressure instead (i.e. there is a fire, and the pressure in the cylinder rises well above the service pressure, perhaps to a pressure corresponding to the cylinder's own relief setting -- it is this abnormally high pressure that would cause the regulator to fail in this instance).
Does anyone have any experience with a similar situation?
Thanks to everyone who reads this.
I am looking at a relief valve that has been installed downstream of a high pressure cylinder. The cylinder contains a gas at a pressure of roughly 2400 psig. The cylinder is hooked up to a regulator that lets the pressure down to approximately 100 psig.
We have a relief valve downstream of the regulator to protect the downstream equipment in the instance that the regulator fails in the wide-open position.
I want to work out how much flow the relief valve will be required to handle. In order to do this, I need to know what the pressure upstream of the regulator will be.
Originally, I thought only of using the service pressure (2400 psig), but I have recently been wondering if perhaps it might make sense to use a fire-scenario pressure instead (i.e. there is a fire, and the pressure in the cylinder rises well above the service pressure, perhaps to a pressure corresponding to the cylinder's own relief setting -- it is this abnormally high pressure that would cause the regulator to fail in this instance).
Does anyone have any experience with a similar situation?
Thanks to everyone who reads this.