Stickers
Chemical
- Jul 10, 2006
- 3
Here's an interesting question that I've been thinking about:
What would happen to the pressure in a vessel which is protected by an undersized PSV? Obviously, it would go up but to what value?
For compressible choked flow, as pressure increases mass flow would increase also so, for some cases, it would seem logical that the vessel pressure would increase to a pressure above 10%/21% overpressure. The PSV would then either pass the required flow or a flange/the vessel would fail. Do you agree?
How about in a fire case? As pressure increases, the heat of vaporization decreases and hence the relief load increases. Would this situation be a positive feedback loop where pressure goes up -> relief load goes up -> pressure goes up etc. ?
What would happen to the pressure in a vessel which is protected by an undersized PSV? Obviously, it would go up but to what value?
For compressible choked flow, as pressure increases mass flow would increase also so, for some cases, it would seem logical that the vessel pressure would increase to a pressure above 10%/21% overpressure. The PSV would then either pass the required flow or a flange/the vessel would fail. Do you agree?
How about in a fire case? As pressure increases, the heat of vaporization decreases and hence the relief load increases. Would this situation be a positive feedback loop where pressure goes up -> relief load goes up -> pressure goes up etc. ?