(44s) An Engineering Method to Mitigate the Impact of Regulatory Focus On Relief System Installations by Prioritizing Risk
AIChE Spring Meeting and Global Congress on Process Safety
2013
2013 Spring Meeting & 9th Global Congress on Process Safety
Global Congress on Process Safety
Poster Session
Monday, April 29, 2013 - 5:00pm to 7:00pm
Since around 2005, regulators in the United States have put greater emphasis on relief device installations meeting the 3% rule. Spending large amounts of money to "fix" relief device installations that pose no safety risk decreases the plant's overall safety. To date, more incidents have occurred during facility construction / modifications than due to relief device chatter. This paper presents a method to assist engineers in determining if relief devices are susceptible to chatter. The methodology in this paper goes beyond the 3% inlet pressure loss tool, to provide an engineering study to determine if existing installations are safe which are allowed in the relevant engineering standards (API STD 520). The model is used as a screening method that places the relief devices into two categories: (1) those installations that may chatter and (2) those installations that need no further review. The goal of any experimental comparison is that the model will error on the side of predicting chatter, but will be reliable enough to screen valves.
In addition to presenting the model, this paper will compare instances of known chatter to research conducted by API, and work done by the Electric Power Research Institute in the 1980's. Thus far, based on research and acquired information, the method predicted all instances of chatter known to the authors. By providing a screening methodology that is supported by experimental data, plant's can focus their spending on fixing real safety issues by identifying which relief installations are not expected to chatter. The paper will close by giving a brief explanation the on-going research in relief valve stability.
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