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10 tenets for reliable
valves |
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Most
valves serve harsh lives, either from the fluids
handled or the demands of service. Follow these
10 tenets when purchasing new or replacement of
old valves.
A
little maintenance can make for significant
longevity. But not every flow control
application provides the conditions available to
our Japanese friend. Most valves serve somewhat
harsher lives, either from the fluids handled or
the demands of service. That’s where I hope this
article will help you.
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1. |
Selection isn’t simple
While
basic applications can be handled easily,
sometimes we’re called on to select components
for systems few have considered or know about.
For example, the Indian engineer who devised the
water distribution system for the garden
fountains of Taj Mahal also faced unique
challenges. His jump to the next level of
technology introduced control by orifices and
constant levels.
We
can see the game getting more interesting. New
applications bring new pressures, temperatures,
flow rates, control accuracies, solutions and
mixture conditions. |
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2. |
Seek reliability
The
valve has been a reliable flow-management device
for several hundreds of years.
Over
the ages, we’ve developed a variety of valves to
serve many purposes.
The
first were basically to stop or start flow.
There
are reasons for choosing the valves we do. When
we select a valve, we rely on guidelines we hope
will be justified by good operation and long
life. A key element in any of these choices is
reliability. |
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3. |
Consider the purpose
A
gate valve is a start-stop unit. The fluid must
be clean enough to prevent build up in the
cavity where the gate fits. If the gate won’t
seat, the valve won’t stop the flow. This
concern led to double-block-and-bleed valve
configurations in critical areas. Plug valves,
while great for limiting clean fluid flow, have
been destroyed by fluids that contain sand or
other grit that erodes seat rings.
The
point is correctness of application. Vendors
spend time and effort asking detailed questions
to assist selection decisions, but operations
people often recognize that a given piece of
data, by omission or commission, can make the
difference. Keep the ultimate user in the loop
to get better application selections.
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4. |
Specify suitable materials
Part
of a good selection is materials, both of
manufacture and application. While valves of
durable materials are available, the method of
manufacture also might be of concern. An alloy
casting process that produces fine-grain valve
surfaces should prove beneficial.
Corrosion resistance seems to correlate with
smaller grains on the exposed interior surfaces.
Plastic coatings have negated some of this
issue, but surface condition still must be
considered.
Using
test coupons in a given stream is a good way to
confirm metallurgical suitability. Some argue
that the method by which the coupons are
connected can influence the test results. For a
particular chlorinated organic application,
engineering references suggested several
suitable materials of construction. The
manufacturing process, however, left a corrosion
residue on the coupons. Testing revealed that
what seemed to be a relatively pure stream
contained enough of the corrosion promoter to
restrict use of the suggested materials. The
final choice was polymer-lined valves.
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5. |
Location
Valve
accessibility is an important variable. Placing
one where it can’t help but accumulate even a
small amount of solids makes failure probable.
Installing a valve in a downward vertical run
upstream of an elbow is far superior to placing
it in a horizontal run just after an elbow.
Placing a valve far from structural support
exposes the line to strains from operation
shock. One plant with mostly polymer piping has
a corporate guideline that says valves should be
supported rigidly. As a result of following this
rule, the lines between them need little concern
except for longer runs. |
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6. |
Smooth operation
The
manner of valve operation also is relevant. Your
choices are more a function of the actual piping
layout and arrangement than the P&ID. This
selection is often a field choice during plant
construction. Fast-track installation directly
from P&IDs means the owner’s jobsite
representative must be cognizant of the needs of
operation to make proper choices. Placing an
automatic operator close to walls or where
movement can’t be observed can lead to
production delays and maintenance headaches.
Valves with rising stems can bring hand-pinch
problems, quarter-turn valves can be knuckle
busters. While these issues are rare in
well-developed plants, our old friend Murphy
tells us that when they arise, it will be in the
worst place at the worst time. We’ve all seen
drain valves for dangerous liquids installed so
the discharge points directly into a wall or
equipment base where splash-back is a serious
safety concern.
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7. |
Pick appropriate seals
Stem
seals or packing is another source of concern
because a seal that binds or dissolves in the
service medium is an obvious problem. Also,
anything that can damage packing or score a
shaft is important. This brings us back to the
application, and the circle can start again,
often with additional possible side branches for
more selection questions.
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8. |
Consider time and frequency
Frequency of operation can drive a sane choice
crazy.
The
frequency of manual operation also is a factor.
If once-a-year operation is typical, and the
location isn’t ideal, manual operation might be
acceptable, but for weekly or monthly operation,
you might need to provide another appropriate
method. Remote manual operators have been
worthwhile investments for some of these
situations. They can prevent complicated drop
legs and high pressure drops that continuously
absorb energy.
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9. |
Avoid entrapment
If
you’re designing a slurry system, don’t place
valves near dead-end turns and in long vertical
lifts. Maintaining fluid velocity is key, but
follow-up flushes can prevent some problems.
Clear
liquids aren’t immune. Consider a vessel feed
system where several liquids enter through the
same nozzle. If the fluids react or the solutes
undergo a phase change, reliability can be
helped with a block valve at the nozzle or a
feed system flush using the bulk fluid in the
vessel.
Phase
changes can subject valves to significantly
different conditions that might not be obvious.
Boiler blow down, for example, often discharges
directly to low-pressure lines. The combination
of scale buildup, suspended solids and sonic
velocity from flashing discharge can form a
grinding medium. A bit of line length downstream
of the valve can help retain liquid conditions
and reduce velocity through the valve. This
downstream flash chamber is a lot easier to
replace than a blow down valve.
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10. |
Consult operators and technicians
Whether you’re upgrading an existing system or
designing a new one, get to know the operators.
Talk to them about the suitability of the valves
currently in use to help determine which types
are reliable and which aren’t. Remember the
oft-neglected truism that the most expensive
valve is the one that burns up more time each
day than it’s worth.
Having said all this, it’s still difficult to
provide a unified checklist for valve selection
because new applications often bring new
problems. Vendors are still a great reference
source, but operations and plant maintenance
personnel are closer to your situation and
should be consulted. An unscheduled shutdown can
easily overwhelm any savings derived from an
inadequate valve. Reliability is the aim,
because plants make money only when they run. |
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To see how BDK can help you choose the correct
valve for your application,
please speak to your nearest BDK office. |
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BDK Certifications & Approvals |
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