This application claims benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 371 to international application No. PCT/US2018/020599 filed on Mar. 2, 2018, the contents of which are incorporated by reference in its entirety.
This invention relates to ball valves, and in particular, to an improved trim design that provides greater resistance to erosion.
Prior art control-valve designs have been developed specifically to handle erosive fluids in high differential pressure applications. This is especially true for plug valves, where a plug slides inside a cage. The cage can include various arrangements of passages or holes; however, the plug valve design creates inefficiencies. Most of the space in the valve body cavity is dedicated to the cage and plug, and thus the size of the holes is generally reduced to a few millimeters in diameter. In erosive service conditions, and in most dirty fluid applications, such holes clog due to accumulated entrapment of the particles in the cage cavity. With some holes becoming clogged, velocities across the remaining unclogged holes can reach undesirably high values. Plug valves that control high differential pressures in erosive service applications (above 300 psi) can experience severe erosion of the trim due to the high velocities developed through passages having relatively small cross-sectional areas. The extent of the damage depends on the hardness of the material, area of exposure, and the velocity and impingement angle of the erosive medium.
A ball valve is a type of quarter-turn valve, in which a spherical or substantially spherical ball is positioned inside a cage within the valve. The ball has a passageway, or port, through which fluid can pass. The ball is attached to a stem, which rotates the ball through ninety degrees. The stem extends through a sleeve to the exterior of the valve where it is connected to a manual handle or to a valve actuator. When the stem is turned to open the valve, the stem rotates the ball so that its port is in line with both ends of the valve, allowing fluid to flow through the port. When the stem is turned to close the valve, the port is perpendicular to the ends of the valve, and the structure defining the port blocks the fluid flow.
Trim designs have also been developed for rotary control ball valves, where the trim consists of an arrangement of impedance plates or discs that are inserted into the port of the ball. The plates are perforated with pass-through holes that allow the fluid to move through the valve. The velocity developed by the fluid flowing across the valve depends on the area of the plate holes, the differential pressure across a given plate and the valve flow rate. The differential pressure across a plate can vary according to the specific plate design and the separation distance between plates. In erosive service conditions, such as sandy fluids or fluids carrying erosive iron-oxide particles, the high velocity erosive medium causes erosion of the upstream face of the plates, especially around the edges of the plate holes. The severity of the erosion depends on the hardness of the erosive medium, its velocity and impingement angle. In prior art valves using flat parallel plates, the fluid velocity gradient from plate to plate results in an impingement angle between the erosive medium and each plate of approximately ninety degrees. In embodiments where a tungsten carbide overlay is provided for the entire upstream faces of the trim plates, erosion is greatest at ninety degrees. Traditionally, designers have sought to minimize erosion of ball valve trim by controlling the velocity across the valve internals and by controlling the impingement angle.
Impedance elements are commonly provided in the port to control, i.e., to reduce the pressure and velocity of the fluid flow. These elements can be integrally formed as part of the ball, or be separate devices. The elements commonly take the form of plates or discs.
The internal elements of the valve, including the ball, cage, stem, sleeves and any impedance elements, are collectively referred to as “trim.” Valves are frequently installed in areas where they are exposed to external corrosive environments, including chemicals and/or seawater, and in addition, corrosive fluids can pass through the valve. Thus, it is common for engineers to specify valves that are manufactured from corrosion-resistant materials. Another concern of valve and pipeline designers is erosion, which can result from high-velocity impingement caused by liquid and gaseous fluids and particulates carried by them.
The prior art shows a number of approaches to valve trim design configuration and construction. Much of the prior art focuses on providing impedance to reduce noise and/or vibration, and does not directly address erosion resistance.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,758,689 discloses diffusers with different size holes. The patent's stated objective is to reduce vibration and noise.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,771,929 and related European Patent Application Publication EP 0838617 A1 disclose a ball valve with an airfoil insert having a convex shape. Again, the purpose of this structure is to reduce vibration and noise.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,886,596 and related U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,923,210 and 7,011,109 disclose multiple plates of different design, with each plate having holes of varying size, shape, and distribution. The patents profess to provide structures having superior noise reduction capabilities.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,218,984 discloses a plate “with a plurality of spaced-apart holes specially shaped, sized, and spaced to maximize efficiency and minimize large scale turbulence in fluid flow through the valve.” This configuration is intended to reduce noise and cavitation, and recognizes that cavitation can cause valve damage.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,610,273 discloses multiple plates with holes not in alignment, with a stated goal of reducing vibration, noise and wear.
It is an object of the present invention to provide ball valve trim components and methods of operation exhibiting good impedance to control fluid flow and superior erosion resistance.
The present invention comprehends improved trim construction for rotary cage ball valves and methods of operation for controlling fluid flow through ball valves that improve flow control, valve performance, and reduce erosion of valve components. The control valve trim of the present invention provides solutions to the problems of controlling velocity and impingement angle, and utilizes a minimum amount of high endurance and hardness materials assembled into cage ball valve internals. The invention increases the useful life of buffer plates for a given plate material in a cost-effective manner.
The valve trim construction of the present invention includes four elements: (a) inserts in the trim plate holes; (b) an assembly of trim plates with hole patterns that are offset from plate-to-plate; (c) independent adjustability of the inclination of the trim plates; and (d) one or more impedance trim plates having a convex upstream face.
In the method of operation of the present invention, the relative inclination angle of one plate with respect to an adjacent plate (along with various plate-hole construction parameters such as their quantity, distribution, contour, depth geometry and dimension in relation to the same parameters of the plate-holes of the adjacent plate) changes the velocity profile. Accordingly, the velocity profile can be varied across specific portions of the valve trim in order to control the pressure drop across the valve and thereby control trim erosion.
Inserts for the Trim Plate Holes
In one embodiment, each fluid passage opening in the trim plate is protected by a tungsten carbide bushing, which is inserted into the opening. The bushing is shaped to minimize erosion. The bushings are aligned so that their longitudinal axis is perpendicular to a planar surface at the location of the hole.
In another embodiment, for additional erosive resistance, a bushing having an adjustable nozzle is provided. A self-aligning nozzle can adjust to the direction of the flow to minimize the attack angle between the erosive fluid and the plate and thereby minimize the edge vortex commonly produced in the bushings of the prior art. Alternatively, the adjustable nozzle can be adjusted during assembly of the valve, with adequate resistance to prevent it from aligning itself in the fluid flow, so as to partially close the bushings, producing various patterns of pressure drop profiles across the plates and valve.
In an embodiment, a unique chamfer design is provided for overlaying material surrounding the interface between the bushing and the upstream face of the plate.
In another embodiment, the entire upstream face of the plate is covered with tungsten carbide. The tungsten carbide overlay is preferably applied using the high-velocity oxygen-fuel (HVOF) thermal spray process.
In yet another embodiment, the bushing inner cavity provides a spiral groove pattern to produce swirling of the passing flow, thus changing the distribution of the flow regime at the plate-hole outlet, which reduces maximum peak outlet velocity of the fluid and the associated erosion.
Assembly of Trim Plates with Hole Patterns that are Offset from Plate-to-Plate
The trim plates of the invention are provided with hole patterns that are offset from plate-to-plate. In an embodiment, each plate has holes of a diameter that are different than the diameter of the holes in adjacent plates.
Independent Adjustability of the Inclination of the Trim Plates
In one aspect, the invention provides for independent rotational adjustment of individual trim plates about the axis of rotation of the ball and perpendicular to the fluid flow so that the relative inclination angle of an individual plate with respect to an adjacent plate is adjustable. The fluid velocity profile can thereby be varied across specific regions of the valve trim in order to control the overall pressure drop across the valve and thereby control trim erosion.
Impedance Trim Plates Having a Convex Upstream Surface
Embodiments of the present invention include trim plates having a convex upstream face in order to provide greater control of the fluid impingement angle, avoid worst-case impingement angles and reduce or prevent erosion of any tungsten carbide overlay that has been applied to the trim plates.
By equalizing the velocity profile across the valve internals, optimizing hole size, location and separation between plates, and using the designated materials, the combination of elements of the present invention greatly reduces valve trim erosion.
The present invention will be described in further detail below with reference to preferred embodiments and in conjunction with the attached drawings in which:
The ball valve trim construction of the present invention comprises elements, which when taken alone, or in novel combination for use in high differential-pressure ball valve applications, provide improved resistance to erosion by the passing fluid. In an embodiment of the combined features, the assembly comprehends a plurality of stacked plates, one or more of which have a convex upstream surface. Each plate is provided with a plurality of holes in a distribution pattern that is offset from the distribution pattern of holes in an adjacent plate in the stack; solid bushings are inserted into the trim plate holes. The trim plates are mounted so that each can be individually and independently rotationally adjusted. Each aspect of the improvements is described in more detail below.
Inserts in the Trim Plate Holes
The shape and size of plates, holes and/or freely movable nozzles are configured and dimensioned to reduce the velocity and/or angle of fluid impingement in order to minimize erosion.
In one embodiment, each passageway or hole in a trim plate is protected by a tungsten carbide overlay of a novel shape. The following analyses will be used in describing the several aspects of the configuration improvements.
The erosion rate equation is:
where:
Eμ=erosion rate of the base material (mm/year),
C=3.15×1010, a conversion factor from m/s to mm/year,
K=material constant,
μ=wall parallel strike velocity of erosive particles,
n=velocity exponent (varies per material),
q=mass flow of erosive medium striking the area (kg/s),
ρw=material density (kg/m3),
A=area exposed to erosion (m2), and
F(α)=a variable between 0 and 1, governed by a functional relationship dependent on the material and the impact angle α.
As shown in
Tungsten carbide provides much higher wear resistance than steel. For example, for a fluid stream containing a quartz erodent,
The fact that tungsten carbide has a density ρw almost twice that of steel and that it has a material constant 18 times as great is very significant in determining the erosion rate, far outweighing the significance of F(α) at an impact angle of ninety degrees, where steel does have a roughly two-to-one advantage over tungsten carbide. To take advantage of its overall superior erosion resistance, bushings made of tungsten carbide are used to protect the holes in the impedance plates, and an overlay of tungsten carbide is provided to protect the intersection between the upstream face of the impedance plate and the side or edge of the tungsten carbide bushing.
For comparison purposes,
The bushings are aligned so that their longitudinal axis is generally perpendicular to the plate's planar surface. In this arrangement, as the fluid moves from plate to plate, passing through the plate holes, the impingement angle between the erosive medium and each plate hole is at, or approaches a ninety degree (90°) angle and the fluid flow is parallel to the walls of the hole.
As discussed above, the advantages of using a tungsten carbide bushing and overlay far outweigh the disadvantages. The tungsten carbide helps protect the plate against tangential velocity erosion, and the overlay around the bushing protects against erosion from fluid swirling adjacent to the bushing. Furthermore, the present invention minimizes the one disadvantage of tungsten carbide with regard to the F(α) curve, namely, that tungsten carbide experiences the greatest erosion at a ninety degree impact angle, where F(α) reaches unity. The redesign of the bushings and/or overlay and the convexity of the plates, as will be discussed below, reduces the number of ninety degree impact angles from the fluid streams as they exit one plate and strike the adjacent plate.
One embodiment of the improved design of the invention is shown in
The turbulent flow around the bushing opening produces high tangential velocities, while the drag force on the bushing's internal face results in a higher density of erosive particles at the edge of the bushing opening, which can cause erosion. The invention protects against this effect by providing the tungsten carbide overlay with a raised and curved surface in the form of a shoulder 280 surrounding the central opening of bushing 150. This feature serves to protect the buffer plate from the erosion produced by the eddy-effect swirling that forms at the junction between the plate and bushing by reducing the impact angle of the fluid flow with the bushings and overlay, thereby providing for operation at a lower point on the F(α) curve.
To achieve this configuration, the tungsten carbide overlay 270, which is preferably deposited by the HVOF process to a thickness of 100 to 150 microns, is increased to form shoulders 280, surrounding the passageway facing the direction of the fluid flow “A” to provide additional protection against erosion. The overlay is achieved through surrounding the area desired with a mask and applying a spray. The shoulders may be built up in the same manner, by placement of the mask and applying more spray paths. The optimum thickness of the raised shoulders depends on the erosive particle hardness, required durability and cost factors, but in practice will not exceed about 500 microns. The overlay can extend around the opening into the walls of the opening. However, in practice the overlay does not go significantly further than the opening edge.
Another embodiment of the improved construction of the invention is shown in
Another advantage of the bushings of
Yet another advantage of the bushings of
In another embodiment that provides for additional erosive resistance, adjustable nozzles are mounted within composite plates to provide a plurality of openings that can be adjusted to be fully open, fully closed or partially open.
An embodiment shown in
Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software can be utilized to determine the initial adjustments of each valve in the embodiments of
Assembly of Trim Plates with Hole Patterns that are Offset from Plate-to-Plate
In this aspect of the invention, a plurality of trim plates forming a set are each provided with fluid passages of varying patterns and/or sizes. The plates are stacked and each plate is provided with a hole pattern in which the holes in each plate are offset from the holes in the adjacent plate(s). In an embodiment, the diameter of the holes changes from plate to plate.
As shown in
The apparatus of the invention avoids such harmful impingement by adopting a predetermined separation distance between plates and empirically selecting the number and diameter of holes, and their distribution, so as to equalize the velocity through the holes. The pressure drop between plates is carefully controlled, allowing the control of the fluid velocity between plates, and thereby reducing the erosion rate of the valve internals.
The exit velocity of a gas from a De Laval nozzle can be calculated as:
where:
Ve=exhaust velocity at nozzle exit (m/s),
T=absolute temperature of inlet gas (° K),
R=universal gas law=8314.5 J/(kmol·K),
M=the gas molecular mass (kg/kmol),
P=absolute pressure of inlet gas (Pa),
Pe=absolute pressure of exhaust gas at nozzle exit (Pa),
k=isentropic expansion factor=cp/cv, where
Referring to the illustration of
A plurality of impedance plates are disposed in passage 945 aligned with valve passage axis 947, or inclined to that axis as illustratively shown in
Each pair of plates is separated by an air gap 990. Note that the dimension of the air gap 990 between each pair of plates need not be the same. Each plate has a predetermined pattern of holes through which fluid flows, as illustratively shown and described below with respect to
In accordance with the invention, the patterns of the holes are varied plate-to-plate in order to prevent the development of high-velocity areas, which lead to high levels of erosion. The hole patterns are thus varied in order to attain uniform velocity distributions across a plate. In one embodiment, the sizes of the holes are varied. In another embodiment, the spacings between the holes in a given plate also vary. In yet another embodiment, a number of such predetermined variances are incorporated in a series of plates.
Free Adjustability of the Inclination of the Trim Plates Independent of Each Other
Movably mounted within passage 1445 are a number of impedance plates disposed parallel to, or inclined relative to axis 1450.
Impedance Trim Plates with a Convex Upstream Surface
As illustrated in
Referring again to the erosion rate equation,
the strike velocity to be used in equation (1) is the velocity parallel to the wall. If the wall is angled or curved, the strike velocity at some of the holes will be a fraction of the total velocity, determined by the equation:
μcurved=μflat cosβ (4),
where:
μcurved=actual strike velocity impinging on a curved surface
μflat=strike velocity that would have impinged on the surface if it had been flat
β=angle of surface. (The impact angle, α=90°−β).
For a curved surface of 15° at one hole, as shown in
μcurved=μflat·cos(15°·π/180°=0.966μflat
Comparing the erosion rate for a curved surface, μcurved, to the erosion rate for a flat surface, μflat, yields:
For tungsten carbide, n=2.3. Furthermore, as noted earlier, tungsten carbine experiences a greater amount of erosion at a ninety degrees strike angle than at lower strike angles. By reference to
The present invention has been described and illustrated by the drawings with reference to specific embodiments. It will be evident to those of ordinary skill in the art that various modifications and changes can be made and the scope of protection is therefore to be defined by the claims that follow.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2018/020599 | 3/2/2018 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2019/168540 | 9/6/2019 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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PCT/US2018/020599—International Search Report and Written Opinion; dated Sep. 8, 2020. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20210003225 A1 | Jan 2021 | US |