Relief Scenarios
Todd Jekel, Ph.D., P.E.
Industrial Refrigeration Consortium
Research & Technology Forum
May 8-9, 2013
Madison, WI
         5        6       7
In this presentation, I will
discuss
  The purpose of scenarios in relief
   system vent piping design
  Common scenarios to consider
  Complications
  Examples
Scenarios
 Defined
  − conditions enabling one or more relief
    valves on a common header to
    simultaneously relieve pressure
 Scenario categories include
                          Maintenance
                            Relief
                          Scenarios
            Operational                 Fire Condition
              Upset
  ASHRAE 15 “Scenarios”
 Basis for sizing the relief valves
   − Vessels (§9.7.5) isolated & subject to a fire
       No insulation or jacket assumed
   − Compressors (§9.8 & Appendix F) “cold-
     start” with the discharge isolation valve
     closed
       Minimum regulated flow with suction
        assumed to be +50°F for high-stage duty and
        the saturated intermediate temperature for
        boosters
 §9.7.8.4 discusses common headers and
  relief valves “expected to operate
  simultaneously”
IIAR 2
 11.3.4 ... The size and maximum
 equivalent length of common
 discharge piping downstream from
 each of two or more relief devices shall
 be governed by the sum of the
 discharge capacities of all the relief
 devices that are expected to
 discharge simultaneously…
Relief header scenarios
 The extremes, often unrealistic
  − Only ONE PRV relieving at a time
  − EVERY PRV simultaneously relieving
      EVERY PRV lifting is not a SCENARIO
         but it does provide a RESULT
 What is the SCENARIO?
  − Fire in the area surrounding the
    components
  − Maintenance related scenario
  − Internal heat addition
  − Other?
 The Extremes
 Only “ONE PRV relieving at a time”
  − Issues
      ASHRAE 15 “scenarios” are for sizing the
       relief valve (isolation)
      ASHRAE 15/IIAR 2 refers to multiple relief
       valves relieving simultaneously
  − Observations
      Every PRV needs to be present in at least
       one scenario
      Only one PRV relieving at a time is often
       not reasonable for external heat addition
       scenarios (i.e. fire)
 The Extremes
 “All at once” simultaneous relief scenario
   − Issues
       Doesn’t provide any additional insight into
        actual scenarios
       May (probably) not be a realistic scenario
       Causes us to ignore possible lessons
        learned by thinking through more realistic
        scenarios
   − Observations
       Provides for an apples-to-apples
        competitive bid
       No one can say you haven’t considered
        every possible overpressure scenario
   Scenario identification
 Use the Process Hazard Analysis (PHA) to
  identify/corroborate scenarios
   − Overpressure of system components or
     plant areas (e.g. machinery room)
 Maintenance procedures should be
  reviewed to identify potential overpressure
  scenarios
 Previous incidents that have occurred in
  the facility or the industry at-large should
  be used to identify overpressure scenarios
   Scenario complications
 Component on common pressure level with
  different MAWPs¹
   − Examples
       Compressor oil separators (or oil coolers) with
        300 psig MAWP discharging into an vessel
        with <300 psig MAWP
       Booster compressors w/higher MAWP
        discharging into an intercooler w/lower MAWP
 Sizing basis for internal heat sources
   − Examples
       Thermosiphon oil coolers
         − Recommend sizing relief valve for full-load oil
           cooling heat load
       Components undergoing Clean-In-Place (CIP)
                                  ¹ Maximum Allowable Working Pressure
 Machinery room scenarios
 Fire
   − What components are nearby?
   − What pressure levels are they on?
   − What are the component MAWPs?
 Maintenance
   − Compressors are the most common
     maintenance scenario
   − ASHRAE sizing scenario
          How many compressors would
           realistically be undergoing this scenario
           simultaneously?
Example: Machinery Room
 Scenario #1: Machinery room fire
  − All vessel relief valves in the room active
  − Heat gain to components with higher
    MAWP on the same pressure vessel is
    considered
      Thermosiphon oil coolers heat gain (fDL)
       added to pilot receiver relief valve
      Oil separators heat gain (fDL) added to
       high pressure receiver or intercooler
   Example: Machinery Room
 Scenario #2-#n: Compressor maintenance
  − Each compressor’s relief valve active for the
    largest number of compressors expected to
    undergo simultaneous maintenance
  − Include the oil cooler if the relief valves
    fitted on the oil cooler and oil separator
    share a common riser to the header
  − Note that each compressor may have it’s
    own scenario if the branch piping details and
    relief valve sizes are different
Other non-simultaneous
justifications
 Fire-rated partition separating
  components on a common header
   − For example, a high-pressure receiver
     located outside of machinery room
 Components are normally in common
  (i.e. not isolated relative to one another) with
  different MAWPs
   − For example, a 300 psig oil pot that is
     connected to a 250 psig recirculator
     package
Mitigation example
 Take steps to reduce the scenario or
  the size of the required relief valve
 Background
  − CIP of refrigerated silo
  − ASME Stamped at 150 psig MAWP
  − CIP has lifted relief valves in the past
    even when steps are skipped and heat
    exchanger is open to suction
  − Unknown how much the pressure
    exceeded the relief valve set pressure
  Mit. Example, continued
 An incident investigation should have been
  done in response to lifting relief valve
  − Possible investigation recommendations
      Revisit/re-do PHA on silo
      Train staff responsible for CIP
      Install a high-pressure cutout to stop CIP if
       pressure reaches a pre-determined limit % of
       MAWP
      Verify CIP process, controls, and equipment
       are being maintained as part of mechanical
       integrity
      Automate the CIP process
  − Wrong response
      Increase the size of the relief valve
Recommendations
 If you use an “all at once” scenario for
  designing the header, consider
  describing and highlighting it as such
  and creating reasonable scenarios for
  showing compliance
 Use the PHA process to identify
  scenarios
 EVERY relief valve on a header MUST
  BE part of AT LEAST ONE scenario
   − Without calculating the back pressure
     you cannot show compliance
For more information,
 See two part series in IRC Cold Front:
  Vol. 12 No. 1 and Vol. 12 No. 2