Calculation of Pressure Regulators
Calculation of Pressure Regulators
Calculation of Pressure Regulators
Instruction
Designing and selecting pressure regulating valves is not a secret science
mastered only by a handful of experts. The procedure described below
allows the user to select a suitable valve for a particular application with
relatively little effort. The calculations based on the so-called Kv value
method have been considerably simplified compared with the very
accurate calculations given in IEC 534; they produce, however, results
which for our purposes are sufficiently accurate.
The Kv value is the flow coefficient which corresponds to a water flow
rate -given in m/h- at a differential pressure of 1 bar and a water
temperature between 5 and 30 C.
The American system uses the flow coefficient Cv which corresponds to
a water flow rate -given in USgal/min- at a pressure difference of 1 psi
and a water temperature of 60 F. The relationship between Kv and Cv
is:
Kv = 0,86 x cv.
To design or select a valve you should firstcalculate the Kv value from the
operating data at which the valve is to operate
Our selection tables and data sheets contain all the technical data
needed to select MANKENBERG valves.
The Kvs value of the selected valve should be equal to the calculated Kv
value plus the required allowance. Most valves operate most efficiently
within 10 to 70 % of their Kvs values; small non-balanced valves such as
our pressure reducers DM 502, 505, 506, 510, 762 and 765, will
operate satisfactorily even at minimum flow rates.
Kv
Q
p1
p2
p
Flow Coeffficient
Volume Flow
Density
Inlet Pressure (abs.)
Outlet Pressure (abs.)
Differential Pressure (p1 - p2)
m/h
m
kg/m
bar
bar
bar
Example:
We are looking for a pressure reducing valve for 2-7 m3/h of methanol
having a density of 790 kg/m3; the inlet pressure varies between 9 and
12 bar and the outlet pressure is to be maintained at 4 bar.
In our calculation we use the maximum flow rate and the minimum
pressure drop
2 m/s
1 m/s
5 m/s
1 m/s
3 m/s
1 m/s
You should select a setting range which places the required control
pressure at the top end. If, for instance, the pressure to be controlled is
2.3 bar, you should select the 0.8-2.5 bar range rather than the 2-5 bar
range, as with the latter the control errors would be considerably
greater. If in special cases the standard setting range is not wide
enough, a lower setting range may be selected provided the valve
operates at low capacity and the control accuracy is of minor
importance. Under such conditions, for instance, a pressure reducer
featuring a setting range of 0.8-2.5 bar may still operate satisfactorily at
0.5 bar.
You should select the materials in accordance with the operating
requirements by using the material resistance table.
Let us return to our example:
Based on the operating data we had calculated a minimum Kvs value of
3.61 m/h. According to our selection table several valve types meet this
requirement. In view of the properties of the fluid to be handled we
select pressure reducer DM 652, DN 25, Kvs value 6 m3/h, setting range
2-5 bar, spring cap with leakage line connection. In its standard version
this valve is manufactured from materials which are compatible with
methanol. Additional features are high control accuracy, low weight,
good surface quality and a price which is remarkably low for a stainless
steel valve.
Here is another example:
We are looking for a overflow valve (back pressure regulator) capable of
discharging 250 m/h of drinking water into an open reservoir at a
pressure of 10 bar. First we calculate the KV value corresponding to the
operating data. Although the pressure drop ( p1 - p2 ) is 10 bar, we shall
use for our calculation a pressure drop of only 0.6 x p1 [bara] = 6.6 bar
because of the evaporation which occurs across the valve.
Thus:
Pipeline Diameter
Volume Flow
Flow Velocity
mm
m/h
m/s
We select the pressure reducer DM 152, DN 25, Kvs value 3.5 m/h,
setting range 0.8-2.5 bar, an angled stainless steel valve which can be
polished. We have selected this valve, although its Kvs value is relatively
high and the required outlet pressure is outside the specified setting
range, because extensive bench testing has shown that this valve is ideal
for the above-mentioned operating conditions.
The selection of a valve first of all that the Kv value is determined from
the operating data under which the valve is to operate.
For subcritical pressure drops, i.e. if
To keep pressure drop and noise within acceptable limits, certain flow
velocities in the pipelines should not be exceeded.
use formula
up to 10 mbar
up to 100 mbar
up to 1 bar
up to 10 bar
above 10 bar
2 m/s
4 m/s
10 m/s
20 m/s
40 m/s
use formular
Accordingly in our example the flow rates upstream and downstream of
the valve are as follows:
Kv
QN
Q1
Q2
N
p
p1
p2
t1
t2
w1
w2
d1
d2
Flow Coefficient
Volume Flow
Volume Flow Upstream of the Valve
Volume Flow Downstream of the Valve
Density in standard condition
Differential Pressure (p1 - p2)
Inlet Preessure (abs.)
Outlet Pressure (abs.)
Temperature at Inlet
Temperature at Outlet
Velocity inside Pipeline before the Valve
Velocity inside Pipeline behind the Valve
Nominal Diameter before the Valve
Nominal Diameter behind the Valve
m/h
m/h
m/h
m/h
kg/m
bar
bar
bar
C
C
m/s
m/s
mm
mm
We are looking for a stainless steel pressure reducing valve for QN max.
1200 m/h CO2, operating temperature 20 C, density 2 kg/m, inlet
pressure 10-12 bar above atmospheric, controlled outlet pressure 7 bar
above atmospheric.
The pressure drop is subcritical, as
You should select a setting range which places the required control
pressure at the top end. If, for instance, the pressure to be controlled is
2.3 bar, you should select the 0.8-2.5 bar range rather than the 2-5 bar
range, as with the latter the control errors would be considerably
greater. If in special cases the standard setting range is not wide
enough, a lower setting range may be selected provided the valve
operates at low capacity and the control accuracy is of minor
importance. Under such conditions, for instance, a pressure reducer
featuring a setting range of 0.8-2.5 bar may still operate satisfactorily at
0.5 bar.
Hence
On the basis of the calculated data and taking into account the
properties of the medium, we select the MANKENBERG overflow valve
UV 4.1, DN 100, Kvs value 100 m/h, setting range 2-5 bar; a relatively
economical and accurate valve very suitable for the application.
use formula
use formula
Kv
G
Q1
Q2
p
p1
p2
t1
t2
w1
w2
d1
d2
Flow Coeffizient
Mass Flow
Volume Flow Upstream of the Valve
Volume Flow Downstream of the Valve
Differential Pressure (p1 - p2)
Inlet Pressure (abs.)
Outlet Pressure (abs.)
Temperature at Inlet
Temperature of Saturated Steam
Velocity Inside of the Pipeline before the valve
Velocity Inside of the Pipeline behind the valve
Nominal Diameter before the Valve
Nominal Diameter behind the Valve
m/h
kg/h
m/h
m/h
bar
bar
bar
C
C
m/s
m/s
mm
mm
Example:
We are looking for a stainless steel pressure reducing valve capable of
reducing the pressure of 1100 kg/h of saturated steam from 7 to 4 bar.
The pressure drop is subcritical because
we calculate
To the Kvs value calculated from the operating data we add an allowance
of 30 % and thus obtain the minimum Kvs value which the valve to be
selected should have
Kvs value 1.3 x Kv value = 1.3 x 12.9 = 16.8 m/h
Calculating the nominal diameter
To keep pressure drop and noise within acceptable limits, certain flow
velocities in the pipelines should not be exceeded. If no values have
been specified we recommend the following:
Exhaust steam
Saturated steam
Super heated steam
25 m/s
40 m/s
60 m/s
You should select a setting range which places the required control
pressure at the top end. If, for instance, the pressure to be controlled is
2.3 bar, you should select the 0.8-2.5 bar range rather than the 2-5 bar
range, as with the latter the control errors would be considerably
greater. If in special cases the standard setting range is not wide
enough, a lower setting range may be selected provided the valve
operates at low capacity and the control accuracy is of minor
importance. Under such conditions, for instance, a pressure reducer
featuring a setting range of 0.8-2.5 bar may still operate satisfactorily at
0.5 bar.