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Pressure vessel

 
Pressure Vessel

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Pressure vessel



 
 
A pressure vessel is a closed container designed to hold gases or liquids at a pressure
Pressure

Pressure is the force per unit area applied to an object in a direction surface normal to the surface. Gauge pressure is the pressure relative to the local atmospheric or ambient pressure....
 different from the ambient pressure
Pressure

Pressure is the force per unit area applied to an object in a direction surface normal to the surface. Gauge pressure is the pressure relative to the local atmospheric or ambient pressure....
.

The pressure differential is potentially dangerous and many fatal accidents have occurred in the history of their development and operation. Consequently, their design, manufacture, and operation are regulated by engineering authorities backed up by laws. For these reasons, the definition of a pressure vessel varies from country to country, but involves parameters such as maximum safe operating pressure and temperature.

sure vessels are used in a variety of applications in both industry and the private sector.






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A pressure vessel is a closed container designed to hold gases or liquids at a pressure
Pressure

Pressure is the force per unit area applied to an object in a direction surface normal to the surface. Gauge pressure is the pressure relative to the local atmospheric or ambient pressure....
 different from the ambient pressure
Pressure

Pressure is the force per unit area applied to an object in a direction surface normal to the surface. Gauge pressure is the pressure relative to the local atmospheric or ambient pressure....
.

The pressure differential is potentially dangerous and many fatal accidents have occurred in the history of their development and operation. Consequently, their design, manufacture, and operation are regulated by engineering authorities backed up by laws. For these reasons, the definition of a pressure vessel varies from country to country, but involves parameters such as maximum safe operating pressure and temperature.

Uses

Pressure vessels are used in a variety of applications in both industry and the private sector. They appear in these sectors as industrial compressed air
Compressed air

Compressed air is air which is kept under a certain pressure, usually greater than that of the atmosphere. In Europe 10 % of all electricity used by industry is used to produce compressed air....
 receivers and domestic hot water storage tanks. Other examples of pressure vessels are: diving cylinder
Diving cylinder

A diving cylinder, scuba tank or diving tank is used to store and transport high pressure breathing gas as a component of SCUBA . It provides gas to the Scuba diving through the demand valve of a diving regulator....
, recompression chamber
Recompression chamber

A recompression chamber is a pressure vessel used to treat divers suffering from certain diving disorders such as decompression sickness.Often the terms recompression chamber, decompression chamber, hyperbaric chamber, and hyperbaric oxygen therapy chamber are used interchangeably....
, distillation towers
Fractional distillation

Fractional distillation is the separation of a mixture into its component parts, or fractions, such as in separating chemical compound by their boiling point by heating them to a temperature at which several fractions of the compound will evaporate....
, autoclave
Autoclave

An autoclave is a pressure vessel designed to heat aqueous solutions above their boiling point at normal atmospheric pressure to achieve sterilization ....
s and many other vessels in mining
Mining

Mining is the extraction of value minerals or other geology materials from the earth, usually from an ore body, vein or seam. Materials recovered by mining include base metals, precious metals, iron, uranium, coal, diamonds, limestone, oil shale, Sodium chloride and potash....
 or oil refineries
Oil refinery

An oil refinery is an industrial process plant where crude oil is processed and refined into more useful petroleum products, such as gasoline, diesel fuel, asphalt, heating oil, kerosene, and liquefied petroleum gas....
 and petrochemical
Petrochemical

Petrochemicals are chemical products made from raw materials of petroleum or other hydrocarbon origin. Although some of the chemical compounds that originate from petroleum may also be derived from coal and natural gas, petroleum is the major source....
 plants, nuclear reactor
Nuclear reactor

A nuclear reactor is a device in which nuclear chain reactions are initiated, controlled, and sustained at a steady rate, as opposed to a nuclear bomb, in which the chain reaction occurs in a fraction of a second and is uncontrolled causing an explosion....
 vessel, habitat of a space ship, habitat of a submarine
Submarine

A submarine is a watercraft capable of independent operation below water. It differs from a submersible, which has only limited underwater capability....
, pneumatic reservoir, hydraulic reservoir under pressure, rail vehicle airbrake reservoir
Air brake (rail)

An air brake is a conveyance brake applied by means of Gas compressor. Modern trains rely upon a fail-safe air brake system that is based upon a design patented by George Westinghouse on March 5, 1872....
, road vehicle airbrake reservoir
Air brake (road vehicle)

Air brakes are used in trucks, buses, Trailer , and semi-trailers. George Westinghouse first developed Air brake for use in railway service. A safer air brake was patented by him on March 5, 1872....
 and storage vessels for liquified gases such as ammonia
Ammonia

Ammonia is a chemical compound with the chemical formula nitrogenhydrogen. It is normally encountered as a gas with a characteristic pungent odor....
, chlorine
Chlorine

Chlorine...
, propane
Propane

Propane is a three-carbon alkane, normally a gas, but compressible to a transportable liquid. It is derived from other petroleum products during oil or natural gas processing....
, butane
Butane

Butane, also called n-butane, is the unbranched alkane with four carbon atoms, CH3CH2CH2CH3....
 and LPG
Liquified petroleum gas

Liquefied petroleum gas is a mixture of hydrocarbon gases used as a fuel in heating appliances and vehicles, and increasingly replacing chlorofluorocarbons as an aerosol propellant and a refrigerant to reduce damage to the ozone layer....
.

Shape of a pressure vessel

Pressure vessels may theoretically be almost any shape, but shapes made of sections of spheres, cylinders, and cones are usually employed. A common design is a cylinder with hemispherical end caps called heads
Head (vessel)

The end caps on a cylindrically shaped Pressure vessel are commonly known as heads....
. More complicated shapes have historically been much harder to analyze for safe operation and are usually far more difficult to construct.

Theoretically, a sphere would be the optimal shape of a pressure vessel. Unfortunately, a spherical shape is difficult to manufacture, therefore more expensive, so most pressure vessels are cylindrical with 2:1 semi-elliptical heads or end caps on each end. Smaller pressure vessels are assembled from a pipe and two covers. A disadvantage of these vessels is that larger diameters make them relatively more expensive, so that for example the most economic shape of a , pressure vessel might be a diameter of and a length of including the 2:1 semi-elliptical domed end caps.

Construction materials

Generally, almost any material with good tensile properties that is chemically stable in the chosen application can be employed.

Many pressure vessels are made of steel. To manufacture a spherical pressure vessel, forged parts would have to be welded together. Some mechanical properties of steel are increased by forging, but welding can sometimes reduce these desirable properties. In case of welding, in order to make the pressure vessel meet international safety standards, carefully selected steel with a high impact resistance & corrosion resistant material should also be used.

Some pressure vessels are made of wound carbon fibre held in place with a polymer. Due to the very high tensile strength of carbon fibre these vessels can be very light, but are much trickier to manufacture.

Other very common materials include polymer
Polymer

A polymer is a large molecule composed of repeating structural units typically connected by covalent chemical bonds. While polymer in popular usage suggests plastic, the term actually refers to a large class of natural and synthetic materials with a variety of properties....
s such as PET
Polyethylene terephthalate

Polyethylene tephthalate , commonly abbreviated PET, PETE, or the obsolete PETP or PET-P), is a thermoplastic polymer resin of the polyester family and is used in synthetic fibers; beverage, food and other liquid Packaging; thermoforming applications; and engineering resins often in combination with glass fiber....
 in carbonated beverage containers and copper
Copper

Copper is a chemical element with the symbol Cu and atomic number 29.It is a ductile metal with very high thermal and electrical conductivity....
 in plumbing.

Scaling

No matter what shape it takes, the minimum mass of a pressure vessel scales with the pressure and volume it contains and is proportional to the strength to weight ratio of the construction material.

Spherical vessel
For a sphere
Sphere

A sphere is a symmetrical geometrical object. In non-mathematical usage, the term is used to refer either to a round ball or to its two-dimensional surface....
, the mass of a pressure vessel is

Where: is mass is the pressure difference from ambient, i.e. the gauge pressure is volume is the density of the pressure vessel material is the maximum working stress
Stress (physics)

In continuum mechanics, stress is a measure of the average amount of force exerted per unit area. It is a measure of the intensity of the total internal forces acting within a body across imaginary internal surfaces, as a reaction to external applied forces and body forces....
 that material can tolerate.

Other shapes besides a sphere have constants larger than 3/2 (infinite cylinders take 2), although some tanks, such as non-spherical wound composite tanks can approach this.

Cylindrical vessel with hemispherical ends
For a cylinder with hemispherical
Hemisphere

Hemisphere may refer to:*half of a sphereAs half of the Earth:*Any half of the Earth or other planetary or stellar body*New World*Old World...
 ends: where:
  • R is the radius
  • L is the middle cylinder length only, and the overall length is L + 2R


2:1 Cylindrical vessel with hemispherical ends
In a vessel with a 2:1 aspect ratio
Aspect ratio

The aspect ratio of a shape is the ratio of its longer dimension to its shorter dimension. It may be applied to two characteristic dimensions of a three-dimensional shape, such as the ratio of the longest and shortest axis, or for symmetrical objects that are described by just two measurements, such as the length and diameter of a rod....
:

Gas storage
In looking at the first equation, the factor PV, in SI units, is in units of (pressurization) energy. For a stored gas, PV is proportional to the mass of gas at a given temperature, thus:

(see gas law)

The other factors are constant for a given vessel shape and material. So we can see that there is no theoretical "efficiency of scale", in terms of the ratio of pressure vessel mass to pressurization energy, or of pressure vessel mass to stored gas mass. For storing gases, "tankage efficiency" is independent of pressure, at least for the same temperature.

So, for example, a typical design for a minimum mass tank to hold helium
Helium

Helium is a colorless, odorless, tasteless, non-toxic, inert monatomic chemical element that heads the noble gas group in the periodic table and whose atomic number is 2....
 (as a pressurant gas) on a rocket would use a spherical chamber for a minimum shape constant, carbon fiber for best possible , and very cold helium for best possible .

Stress in thin-walled pressure vessels


Stress in a thin-walled pressure vessel in the shape of a sphere is:

Where is hoop stress, or stress in the circumferential direction, p is internal gauge pressure, r is radius of the sphere, and t is thickness. A vessel can be considered "thin-walled" if the radius is at least 20 times larger than the wall thickness.

Stress in a thin-walled pressure vessel in the shape of a cylinder is:


Where is hoop stress
Hoop stress

Hoop Stress Hoop stress is mechanical stress defined for rotationally-symmetric objects being the result of forces acting circumferentially ....
, or stress in the circumferential direction, is stress in the longitudinal direction, p is internal gauge pressure, r is radius of the cylinder, and t is wall thickness.

Winding angle of carbon fibre vessels


Wound infinite cylindrical shapes optimally take a winding angle of 54.7 degrees, as this gives the necessary twice the strength in the circumferential direction to the longitudinal.

Design and operation standards


Pressure vessels are designed to operate safely at a specific pressure and temperature, technically referred to as the "Design Pressure" and "Design Temperature". A vessel that is inadequately designed to handle a high pressure constitutes a very significant safety hazard. Because of that, the design and certification of pressure vessels is governed by design codes such as the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code
American Society of Mechanical Engineers

The American Society of Mechanical Engineers is a professional body, specifically an engineering society, focused on mechanical engineering.The ASME was founded in 1880 by Alexander Lyman Holley, Henry Rossiter Worthington, John Edison Sweet and Matthias N....
 in North America, the Pressure Equipment Directive
Pressure Equipment Directive

The Pressure Equipment Directive 97/23/EC of the EU sets out the standardization for the design and manufacture of pressure equipment generally over 1 litre in volume and having a maximum pressure more than 0.5 Bar gauge....
 of the EU (PED), Japanese Industrial Standard (JIS), CSA
Canadian Standards Association

Established in 1919, the Canadian Standards Association is a not-for-profit association composed of representatives from government, industry, and consumer groups....
 B51 in Canada
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
, AS1210 in Australia and other international standard
International standard

International standards are standards developed by international standards organisations. International standards are available for consideration and use, worldwide....
s like Lloyd's
Lloyd's Register

The Lloyd's Register Group is a Sea classification society and independent risk management organisation providing risk assessment and mitigation services and management systems certification....
, Germanischer Lloyd
Germanischer Lloyd

The Germanischer Lloyd AG is a classification society based in the city of Hamburg, Germany. As a technical supervisory organization Germanischer Lloyd regularly conducts safety surveys on more than 7,000 ships with over 79 Mio GT....
, Det Norske Veritas
Det Norske Veritas

Stiftelsen Det Norske Veritas or DNV is a classification society organized as a foundation, with the objective of "Safeguarding life, property, and the environment"....
, Stoomwezen etc.

Note that where the pressure-volume product is part of a safety standard, any incompressible liquid in the vessel can be excluded as it does not contribute to the potential energy stored in the vessel, so only the volume of the compressible part such as gas is used.

List of standards

  • BS 4994
  • EN 13445
    EN 13445

    EN 13445 "Unfired Pressure Vessels" is a standard that provides rules for the design, fabrication, and inspection of pressure vessels...
  • ASME Code Section VIII Division 1
  • ASME Code Section VIII Division 2 Alternative Rule
  • ASME Code Section VIII Division 3 Alternative Rule for Construction of High Pressure Vessel
  • ASME PVHO (Safety Standard for Pressure Vessels for Human Occupancy)
  • BS 5500
  • Stoomwezen
  • AD Merkblätterasa
  • CODAP
  • AS 1210
  • ISO 11439
  • IS 2825-1969 (RE1977)_code_unfired_Pressure_vessels


Alternatives to pressure vessels

Depending on the application and local circumstances, alternatives have come about which can replace pressure tanks. An example to this is in the private sector (for use in domestic water collection systems). Non-pressure vessel systems are increasingly seen with:
  • no storage tank
    Storage tank

    A storage tank is a container, usually for holding liquids, sometimes for compressed gases . The term can be used for reservoirs , and for manufactured containers....
     or pump
    Pump

    A pump is a device used to move fluids, such as gases, liquids or Slurry. A pump displaces a volume by physical or mechanical action. One common misconception about pumps is the thought that they create pressure....
     at all (gravity controlled systems) Gravity-controlled systems are usually created by placing the water harvester
    Water tank

    Water tanks are liquid storage containers, these tanks are usually storing water for human consumption. The need for water tank systems is as old as civilized man....
     on an elevation (e.g. rooftops). This will produce about 0.5 PSI per foot of water head (height difference). However, municipal water or pumped water is typically around 90 PSI.
  • or with either inline pump controllers or pressure-sensitive pumps :


History of pressure vessels