Claims
- 1. A vapor control system for a tank of a ship comprising:
- a gas compression pump means, flow-connected to the ullage space of the ship's tank, operating during a first period of time to compress gases and vapors collected from the ullage space to a first pressure;
- a storage tank means for storing the compressed gases in isolation from the atmosphere at the first pressure;
- a gas evacuation pump means, flow-connected to the ullage space of the ship's tank, operative for evacuating remaining, uncollected, gases and vapors from the ullage space at a second pressure less than the first pressure;
- an ullage space of another, second, tank for temporarily storing at the second pressure the gases and vapors evacuated from the tank's ullage space by the evacuation pump means.
- 2. The vapor control system according to claim 5 further comprising:
- a first gas flow conduit flow-connecting the gas evacuation pump means to the ullage space of the second tank; and
- a second gas flow conduit flow-connecting the ullage space of the second tank to the compression pump means;
- wherein the gas evacuation pump means is flow-connected to a flow of gas and vapor from the ullage space to the compression pump means, and is flow-connected in series with the compression pump means.
- 3. The vapor control system according to claim 2 wherein the gas evacuation pump means that is series-flow-connected with the compression pump means develops a third pressure less than atmospheric pressure in the ullage space of the tank, which third pressure is in magnitude much less than the first pressure.
- 4. The vapor control system according to claim 2 wherein the gas evacuation pump means that is series-flow-connected with the compression pump means is also operative to evacuate gases and vapors from the ullage space of the tank during the compressing of the compression pump means during the first time, serving to boost the pressure of the evacuated gases and vapors en route to the compressor pump means by the second pressure that is less than the first pressure.
- 5. The vapor control system according to claim 1 wherein the gas evacuation pump means is in parallel with the compression pump means.
- 6. The vapor control system according to claim 1 wherein the compression pump means comprises:
- a plurality of gas pumps connected in series for successively compressing the gases and vapors from the ullage space at higher and higher pressures until a last such gas pump connects to the storage tank means.
- 7. The vapor control system according to claim 1 wherein the compression pump means comprises:
- a radial flow gas compressor.
- 8. The vapor control system according to claim 1 wherein the compression pump mean comprises:
- a reciprocating-piston gas compressor.
- 9. The vapor control system according to claim 1 which further comprises:
- a heat exchanger means between the compression pump means and the storage tank means for removing some of a heat of compression from the compressed gases.
- 10. The vapor control system according to claim 9 wherein the heat exchanger means comprises:
- a counterflow heat exchanger exchanging the heat of the compressed gases with seawater.
- 11. A vapor control system for a tank of a ship comprising:
- a gas compression pump means, flow-connected to the ullage space of the ship's tank, operating during a first time to compress gases and vapors collected from the ullage space to a first pressure;
- a storage tank means for storing the compressed gases in isolation from the atmosphere at the first pressure;
- a gas evacuation pump means, flow-connected to the ullage space of the ship's tank, controllably operative during a second time, after the first time, to evacuate under a second pressure, less than the first pressure, remaining, uncollected, gases and vapors from the ullage space; and
- an underpressure control for controlling the controllable gas evacuation pump to maintain a third pressure less than atmospheric pressure, and less than the first and the second pressures, within the ullage space of the tank so that internal and external pressure forces acting on the liquid contents of the tank at a site of any incipient rupture to such tank will be in balance regardless that such forces should vary upon the occurrence, and upon the location, of the rupture.
- 12. A system to control any emission of vapors from a tank containing a vaporizable liquid simultaneously that any spillage of liquid due to a rupture of the tank is reduced, the system comprising:
- means for maintaining a pressure less than atmospheric pressure within an ullage space of the tank containing the vaporizable liquid so that internal and external pressure forces acting on the liquid contents of the tank at a site of any rupture to such tank will be in balance regardless that such forces should vary upon the occurrence, and upon the location, of the rupture, the pressure-maintaining means comprising:
- an evacuation gas pumping means connected to the ullage space of the tank for removing gases and vapors from the ullage space so as to maintain the pressure less than atmospheric therein; and
- means for preventing that vapors of the vaporizable liquid that are within the gases and vapors removed form the ullage space of the tank by the evacuation gas pumping means should be vented to the atmosphere, the vapor-venting preventing means comprising:
- a compression gas pumping means for compressing the gases and the vapors that are removed from the ullage space by the evacuation gas pumping means; and
- a storage tank means for storing the compressed gases and vapors in isolation from the atmosphere.
- 13. The vapor-emission-controlling liquid-spill-preventing system according to claim 12 further comprising:
- means for creating a non-explosive mixture of gases and vapors in the ullage space of the tank.
- 14. The system according to claim 13 wherein the means for creating comprising:
- inert gas source means, flow-connected to the ullage space of the tank, for putting an inert gas into the ullage space so as to render the mixture of gases and vapors therein to be non-explosive;
- wherein one of the gases that the evacuation gas pumping means is removing from the ullage space is the inert gas that is put into the ullage space by the inert gas source means; and
- wherein one of the gases that the compression gas pumping means is compressing is the inert gas.
- 15. The vapor-emission-controlling liquid-spill-preventing system according to claim 12 adopted for use on a tank of a ship
- wherein the means for maintaining operates to maintain the non-explosive mixture of gases at the pressure less than the atmospheric pressure commencing at a time prior to a voyage of the ship;
- wherein the compression gas pumping means operates to compress the gases and vapors commencing at the time prior to the voyage of the ship; and
- wherein the means for creating operates to create the non-explosive mixture of gases commencing at the time prior to the voyage of the ship.
- 16. The vapor-emission-controlling liquid-spill-preventing system according to claim 12 adopted for use on a tank of a ship
- wherein the means for maintaining is maintaining the pressure that is less than the atmospheric pressure substantially continuously during a voyage of the ship.
- 17. The vapor-emission-controlling liquid-spill-preventing system according to claim 12 adopted for use on a tank of a ship containing oil
- wherein the means for creating is filling the ullage space above the liquid level of the ship's tank's oil with inert gas so as to produce a mixture of air, inert gas and evaporated hydrocarbon vapors.
- 18. The vapor-emission-controlling liquid-spill-preventing system according to claim 12 adopted for use on a tank of a ship wherein the means for maintaining further comprises:
- means for monitoring the pressure less than atmospheric pressure within the ullage space of the ship's tank; and
- a vacuum sub-system comprising:
- pump means for controllably creating and maintaining the pressure less than atmospheric pressure in the ruptured tank; and
- a computer, responsive to the means for monitoring, for controlling the pump means so as to produce and maintain the pressure that is less than atmospheric pressure.
- 19. A system to (i) control volatile organic hydrocarbon vapor emissions from a ship's tank containing oil while (ii) reducing any spillage of oil from a rupture to the ship's tank, the system comprising:
- inerting means for maintaining a gaseous mixture enhanced with an inert gas in an ullage space above the oil within the ship's tank containing oil, the mixture being sufficiently enhanced with the inert gas so as to reduce the flammability of volatile organic hydrocarbon vapors and air within this ullage space;
- vacuum means controllable for removing air, organic hydrocarbon vapors, and the gaseous mixture enhanced in inert gas from the ullage space so as to maintain a gaseous pressure within the ullage space that is than atmospheric pressure nonetheless that mixture of gases therein is enhanced in the inert gas;
- control means for controlling the vacuum means so as to maintain a balance of forces acting upon the oil within the tank upon occasion of the tank's rupture so as to impede any spillage of oil from the tank through the rupture; and
- means for preventing that organic hydrocarbon vapor that are within the removed gases should be vented to the atmosphere.
- 20. A method of simultaneously managing the (i) makeup, (ii) pressure, and (iii) emission of a mixture of gases and vapors that are within an ullage space of a tank containing a vaporizable liquid, the method comprising:
- establishing and maintaining the relative proportions of a plurality of individual gases, both flammable and nonflammable, that are within the ullage space of the tank containing a vaporizable liquid so as to be, as an aggregate mixture of gases and vapors, non-explosive by a process of:
- pumping an inert gas into the ullage space; meanwhile simultaneously
- maintaining substantially continuously during a voyage of the ship a gas pressure of the mixture of gases and inert gas and vapors within the ullage space to be of a magnitude less than atmospheric pressure by a process of:
- pumping the mixture of gases and inert gas and vapors from the ullage space; meanwhile simultaneously
- preventing that at least the vapors Of the pumped mixture of gases and inert gas and vapors should be emitted to the atmosphere by a process of compressing the gases and the inert gas and the vapors that are removed from the ullage space by pumping; and
- storing the compressed gases and inert gas and vapors in isolation from the atmosphere.
- 21. The method according to claim 20 adapted for use in the tank of a ship containing oil wherein the maintaining comprises:
- constantly and dynamically maintaining the ullage space gas pressure P.sub.v, which ullage space gas pressure is less than atmospheric pressure, to be of a magnitude which, when added to an instantaneous hydrostatic pressure of the oil at a height h.sub.i above any rupture to the tank, will equal an external pressure P.sub.E that is occurring at the highest point of said rupture to the tank;
- wherein said external pressure P.sub.E is itself equal to the atmospheric pressure P.sub.A plus a hydrostatic water pressure occurring at a height h.sub.e of the ship's waterline above said highest point of the rupture;
- wherein because an internal pressure within the tank, which internal pressure equals the controlled ullage pressure P.sub.v plus the hydrostatic oil pressure, is dynamically maintained equal to said external pressure P.sub.E, which external pressure equals the uncontrolled atmospheric pressure P.sub.A plus the hydrostatic water pressure, any oil out-flow, or spillage, from the tank is substantially prevented from points above said highest point of the rupture.
- 22. The method according to claim 21 further comprising upon the occurrence of any rupture to the ship's tank which rupture is below the ship's waterline:
- placing a non-structural barrier at the location of the rupture to the tank that is below the ship's waterline, and in position between the oil that is within the tank and the surrounding water, so as to aid, by avoidance of stratified flow, said oil out-flow, or spillage, from points below said highest point of the rupture.
- 23. A system for simultaneously managing the (i) composition and the (ii) pressure and the (iii) emission of fluid vapors from an ullage space of a ship's tank containing a vaporizable fluid where any spillage of such fluid from the tank upon any rupture to the tank is desired, insofar as is possible, to be avoided, the system comprising:
- partial vacuum means for evacuating gases and vapors that are within the ullage space of the tank so as to create and maintain within the ullage space a gas pressure that is less than atmospheric pressure, this creating and maintaining being so that pressure forces acting on the fluid contents of the tank are maintained in balance regardless that such forces should vary upon the occasion of any rupture of the tank;
- inert gas means for introducing an inert gas into the ullage space of the tank sufficient in amount so as to render a resulting mixture of a plurality of gases and vapors, including the inert gas itself, that are within the ullage space to be non-explosive, this introducing being simultaneously with, and regardless that, the partial vacuum means is creating and maintaining the pressure less than atmospheric pressure; and
- means for preventing that vapors of the vaporizable liquid that are within the removed gases should be vented to the atmosphere.
- 24. The system according to claim 23 wherein the means for preventing comprises:
- a compression gas pumping means for compressing the gases, including vapors, that are removed from the ullage space by the evacuation gas pumping means; and
- a storage tank means for storing the compressed gases, including vapors, in isolation from the atmosphere.
REFERENCE TO RELATED PATENT APPLICATIONS
The present patent application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 377,886 filed Jul. 10, 1989 for a SYSTEM TO REDUCE SPILLAGE OF OIL DUE TO RUPTURE OF A SHIP'S TANK, issued Oct. 20, 1992, as U.S. Pat. No. 5,156,109 and also of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 503,712 filed Apr. 3, 1990, for INERT GAS CONTROL IN A SYSTEM TO REDUCE SPILLAGE OF OIL DUE TO RUPTURE OF A SHIP'S TANK, issued Mar. 3, 1992, as U.S. Pat. No. 5,092,259 which predecessor applications are to the same inventor as the present application.
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
377886 |
Jul 1989 |
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