There are tens of thousands of industrial manufacturing facilities operating throughout the world. Each chemical plant, petroleum refinery, pharmaceutical plant and other manufacturing facility has equipment and piping systems that operate under pressure. In the event of excessive overpressure, equipment or piping failures could result in economic loss to business, environmental contamination, and health and safety risks. To reduce such risks, equipment and piping systems that operate under pressure must be protected from excessive overpressure. This is accomplished with the installation of pressure-relief devices, which must be properly sized and specified for the intended service conditions. More specifically, overpressure protection is provided by pressure-relief devices that are sized, selected, specified and installed for the postulated governing overpressure contingency. To adequately size a pressure-relief device to provide overpressure protection for equipment and piping, several relief event scenarios always should be considered. In the U.S.A., federal and state regulations require operating industrial facilities to have risk management programs in place that include the design basis for safety-relief systems installed to protect pressurized equipment from overpressure. For new installations, the pressure-relief system design philosophy should be established during the project design phase. However, for process facilities that have been in operation for many years, the original design basis and calculations for the safety-relief devices often are no longer available. For existing pressure-relieving installations, fitness-for-service assessments should include verification of the relief device size and specification, and review and substantiation of required documentation. This paper presents results from a study intended to examine which overpressure relief contingency, if any, most often governs the size of relief devices that are used to protect equipment and piping systems. The required elements of a pressure-relieving system sizing and documentation program are described. The author emphasizes seven relief contingencies to be considered when sizing pressure-relief devices. Some restrictions and limitations of the codes and standards that are applied for design guidance of pressure-relieving systems are challenged. For this study, relief device sizing data was compiled from a number of chemical and petrochemical project applications to provide a reasonable sample of contingencies that governed the sizes of existing and new safety-relief valves and rupture disks. The study results show that a significant number of pressure-relief devices presently installed in the U.S.A. likely are undersized. This further suggests that, worldwide, an alarming number of pressure-relief devices may be undersized.
Skip Nav Destination
WShort@PSEIncDE.com
Article navigation
February 2006
Research Papers
Fire Versus Non-Fire Contingencies: A Study of Pressure-Relief Device Sizing Risks
W. E. Short, II
WShort@PSEIncDE.com
W. E. Short, II
Principal Engineer
, Pressure Systems Engineering Inc., 2605 Eastburn Center, Newark, Delaware 19711
Search for other works by this author on:
W. E. Short, II
Principal Engineer
, Pressure Systems Engineering Inc., 2605 Eastburn Center, Newark, Delaware 19711WShort@PSEIncDE.com
J. Pressure Vessel Technol. Feb 2006, 128(1): 122-129 (8 pages)
Published Online: October 26, 2005
Article history
Received:
August 25, 2005
Revised:
October 26, 2005
Citation
Short, W. E., II (October 26, 2005). "Fire Versus Non-Fire Contingencies: A Study of Pressure-Relief Device Sizing Risks." ASME. J. Pressure Vessel Technol. February 2006; 128(1): 122–129. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2141638
Download citation file:
Get Email Alerts
Cited By
Investigations of In-Plane Fluidelastic Instability in a Multispan U-Bend Tube Array—Part II: Tests in Two-Phase Flow
J. Pressure Vessel Technol (April 2023)
Investigations of In-Plane Fluidelastic Instability in a Multispan U-Bend Tube Array—Part I: Tests in Air Flow
J. Pressure Vessel Technol (April 2023)
Research on the Buckling Load of Clamped Spherical Caps Under External Pressure: Analyzed by the Fourier Series Model With Initial Geometric Imperfections
J. Pressure Vessel Technol (April 2023)
Identification of Crack Shapes by Digital Image Correlation Using JE-MAP Method
J. Pressure Vessel Technol
Related Articles
Effects of Pressure Relief Valve Behavior on 2-Phase Energy Storage in a Pressure Vessel Exposed to Fire
J. Pressure Vessel Technol (May,2002)
The Effect of Pressure Relief Valve Blowdown and Fire Conditions on the Thermo-Hydraulics Within a Pressure Vessel
J. Pressure Vessel Technol (August,2006)
Dynamic Behavior of Transportation Pressure Relief Valves Under Simulated Fire Impingement Conditions
J. Pressure Vessel Technol (February,2000)
Instability of Pressure Relief Valves in Water Pipes
J. Pressure Vessel Technol (August,2010)
Related Chapters
Use of PSA in Lisencing of EPR 1600 in Finland (PSAM-0160)
Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Probabilistic Safety Assessment & Management (PSAM)
Dynamic Behavior of Pumping Systems
Pipeline Pumping and Compression Systems: A Practical Approach
Subsection NC, ND—Class 2 and 3 Components
Companion Guide to the ASME Boiler & Pressure Vessel Code, Volume 1, Second Edition