The present disclosure relates generally to fluid pressure reduction devices and, more particularly, to fluid pressure reduction devices for use in process fluid handling systems.
In the process control industry, many control valve applications, such as power generation or petroleum refining applications, result in process conditions that produce unacceptable levels of aerodynamic noise. For example, a generally acceptable level of aerodynamic noise is approximately 85 dBA measured 1 meter downstream and 1 meter off the pipeline containing the control valve. It is understood that Fluid Pressure Reduction Devices implemented as valve trim or as vent diffusers can substantially reduce the noise generated within various process applications. The physics and fluid dynamics of these fluid pressure reduction devices and the prediction of aerodynamic noise in applications of fluid pressure reduction devices have been fairly well understood in recent years.
Conventional solutions to control valve noise problems include fluid pressure reduction devices of a cylindrical shape that implement special internal fluid structures to stage the pressure drop (i.e. control the pressure drop in discrete transitions within the fluid pressure reduction device) and/or the segregate of the fluid pressure reduction device outlet flow into multiple, smaller flow streams to reduce aerodynamic noise. Further, it is understood that conventional fluid pressure reduction devices use two general passageway cross sections: circular and rectangular. These passageway cross sections were typically limited by prior manufacturing capabilities. Due to these historical manufacturing and prediction technologies, these passageway cross sections continue in present implementations. Specifically, fluid pressure reduction devices constructed from stacked discs or investment cast plates generally produce rectangular cross section flow passage shape while cylindrically formed components with subsequent traditional machining operations yield circular cross section flow passage shapes.
The purpose of these flow passages is to create noise reduction structures within the fluid pressure reduction devices to reduce the amount of energy in the flow stream that is converted to noise and/or shift the frequency of the generated noise to levels beyond the audible range. One such common strategy to reduce aerodynamic noise is to minimize the size of apertures or reduce the cross-sectional area of the passageways in the fluid pressure reduction devices to induce a peak frequency shift of the generated noise beyond the audible range. Thus, to improve the performance of a fluid pressure reduction device, manufacturers make the flow passages as small as practical. However, this noise reduction technique is disadvantageous because it can reduce the overall flow capacity of the control valve and makes the fluid pressure reduction device susceptible to plugging or flow impediment.
Example fluid pressure reduction devices disclosed herein may be used to reduce the energy, pressure, and/or noise associated with process fluids. In accordance with one example, a fluid pressure reduction device may include a hollow cylinder having an inner surface and an outer surface and a plurality of passageways extending between the inner and outer surfaces. Each of the passageways delimits an aperture having a cross-sectional area defining a wetted perimeter that is greater than a wetted perimeter of one of a circle or a rectangle having the same cross-sectional area as the aperture.
In accordance with another example, a fluid pressure reduction device may include a hollow cylinder having an inner surface and an outer surface and a plurality of passageways extending between the inner and outer surfaces defining a hydraulic diameter of the passageway that substantially reduces aerodynamic noise developed by fluid flow within the passageway.
In accordance with yet another example, a fluid pressure reduction device may include a cylinder having an inner diameter surface and an outer diameter surface and a plurality of apertures extending between the inner and outer diameter surfaces. Each of the apertures has an opening having at least one curvilinear side or edge.
In accordance with yet another example, a fluid pressure reduction device may include a cylinder having an inner diameter surface and an outer diameter surface and a plurality of apertures extending between the inner and outer diameter surfaces. Each of the apertures has an opening on the outer diameter surface that includes at least first and second area portions defined by a plane intersecting a centroid of the opening and having different areas.
Example fluid pressure reduction devices disclosed herein may be used to reduce the noise and/or pressure generated in a process fluid such as, for example, a gas or liquid in a process fluid handling system. Unlike known fluid pressure reduction devices having circular or rectangular apertures, the example fluid pressure reduction devices described herein are implemented using apertures having relatively larger wetted perimeters than known apertures. Additionally, the example apertures used to implement the example fluid pressure reduction devices described herein provide a relatively larger wetted perimeter while at the same time providing fluid passages with apertures having cross-sectional areas substantially the same or equal to those used to form apertures in known fluid pressure reduction devices. In other words, the example fluid pressure reduction devices described herein utilize apertures having relatively larger wetted perimeter-to-area ratios than provided by known fluid pressure reduction devices utilizing substantially circular or rectangular apertures.
As described in greater detail below, increasing the wetted perimeter-to-area ratio of an aperture substantially improves the noise reduction properties of the aperture. In known fluid pressure reduction devices, the wetted perimeters of circular or rectangular-shaped apertures formed therein are inherently limited by a requirement to reduce fluid noise yet maintain adequate flow capacity. Thus, to increase the wetted perimeters of known circular or rectangular-shaped apertures, the overall size or dimensions of the aperture must be increased. However, increasing the overall aperture size decreases the wetted perimeter-to-area ratio and affects, among other properties, the noise attenuation properties of the aperture.
In some example implementations, the fluid pressure reduction devices described below may be implemented using apertures that form asymmetric openings and/or which have concave or curvilinear sides or perimeter edges. In particular, the example apertures described below have relatively larger wetted perimeter-to-area ratios than the apertures used with known fluid noise reduction devices. Some of the example apertures described below can be arranged in alternating inverted or rotated pattern configurations to increase aperture density (e.g., the number of apertures formed in a given area of a fluid pressure reduction device), thereby increasing the overall wetted perimeter-to-area ratio of the fluid pressure reduction device. Increasing the wetted perimeter-to-area ratio of each aperture (and the overall fluid pressure reduction device) and/or forming more apertures in a given fluid pressure reduction device enables the fluid pressure reduction device to maintain or increase flow capacity while more effectively attenuating noise for a corresponding pressure reduction.
Turning in detail to the illustrated example of
Although in the illustrated example, the fluid pressure reduction device 200 is implemented using one cylinder (i.e., the cylinder 202) in alternative example implementations described in greater detail below, the fluid pressure reduction device 200 may be implemented using two or more concentric, coaxial, or nested cylinders (e.g., the example fluid pressure reduction device 1400 of
In alternative example implementations, fluid pressure reduction devices implemented as described herein may be formed using substantially hollow structures or tubular structures of non-circular cross-sectional shapes. That is, example fluid pressure reduction devices described herein may be implemented using hollow structures of elliptical cross-sectional shapes or any other cross-sectional shapes. However, for purposes of clarity the example fluid pressure reduction devices are described herein using hollow cylinders of substantially circular cross-sectional shapes.
Although the triangular apertures 214 formed by the triangular passageways 212 are shown extending through to the inner surface 204 and the outer surface 206, in other example implementations, surface shapes may be formed on surfaces within the cylinder wall 208 and, thus, may not be visible from the exterior (e.g., at the surfaces 204 and 206) of the cylinder 202. For example, the inlet and outlet apertures formed on the inner and outer surfaces 204, 206 may be shaped differently than a corresponding passageway (e.g., the triangular passageway 212) extending therebetween through the cylinder wall 208. In a nested cylinder configuration (e.g., the example fluid pressure reduction device 1400 of
In the inverted pattern used to arrange the triangle apertures 214 as shown in
Inverting and offsetting apertures substantially reduces or eliminates continuous portions of material between aperture rows and enables a continuous increase in flow through a fluid pressure reduction device as a plug of a valve assembly (e.g., a plug 1602 of a valve assembly 1600 shown in
In the illustrated example of
The fluid pressure reduction device 200 may be implemented using apertures that form differently shaped openings that are intermingled, some of which may be selected according to the examples described herein. For example, in alternative example implementations, the fluid pressure reduction device 200 may be implemented using a combination of apertures that form the triangular apertures 214 and apertures having hexagonal openings (e.g., the hexagonal apertures 702 of
In the illustrated example implementations, the triangular passageways 212 form flow paths between the inner surface 204 and the outer surface 206 to enable process fluids to flow in a controlled manner via the flow paths between the inner surface 204 and the outer surface 206 of the cylinder wall 208. In some example implementations, each of the triangular passageways 212 may form a single flow path. In those example implementations, all of the process fluid entering through one end (e.g., through the inner surface 204 end) of one of the triangular passageway 212 will exit out of the other end (e.g., the outer surface 206 end) of the same triangular passageway 212.
The triangular passageways 212 are formed in the cylinder 202 in a pattern or configuration that substantially increases the wetted perimeter associated with the fluid pressure reduction device 200 compared to known fluid pressure reduction devices. In particular, as shown in
Alternately inverting each of the triangular passageways 212 as shown in
The example fluid pressure reduction device 200 may be made of any type of material or combination of materials, including metallic and/or non-metallic materials. Additionally, one or more manufacturing processes may be used to manufacture the example fluid pressure reduction device 200 to have any desired diameter and length. The manufacturing processes may include, for example, investment casting, precision casting, laser cutting, water jet cutting, electrical discharge machining (EDM), powder metallurgy (PM), metal injection molding (MIM), acid etching, a drawn tubing process, and/or any other suitable manufacturing or fabrication process. The above-mentioned manufacturing processes are well known to one of ordinary skill in the art.
The above-mentioned manufacturing processes provide several methods to manufacture cylinders. An example method involves laser cutting the passageways within a rectangular piece of flat stock, bending the flat stock, and welding the ends of the rectangular flat stock to form a cylinder. As previously mentioned, multiple cylinders could be concentrically or coaxially assembled to increase the passageway length and improve the attenuation characteristics by incorporating more pressure drop stages. Another example method involves investment casting, which involves pouring a molten metal into a ceramic mold. Investment casting enables the simultaneous production of multiple cylinders in a high-volume mass-production process without requiring substantial amounts of production equipment, thereby keeping manufacturing overhead costs relatively low. Some of the above-mentioned manufacturing processes such as, for example, PM and MIM enable the use of materials that are not readily available in flat stock to make the example fluid pressure reduction device 200. In particular, non-metallic materials such as, for example, ceramics may be used with some or all of the above-mentioned manufacturing processes or similar processes to form the example fluid pressure reduction device 200.
As shown in
In addition to facilitating an alternating inverted pattern configuration to form relatively more apertures in a fluid pressure reduction device 200, the triangular aperture 214 has a relatively larger wetted perimeter-to-area ratio than the circular aperture 302. As shown in
The increased wetted perimeter-to-area ratio of the triangular aperture 214 also has a relatively lower hydraulic diameter (dH) and a relatively lower control valve style modifier factor (FD) than the hydraulic diameter (dH) and the control valve style modifier factor (FD) of the circular aperture 302. The hydraulic diameter (dH) is a dimension used to represent the size of an opening (e.g., a fluid outlet opening or a fluid inlet opening) on a cylinder surface (e.g., the inner surface 204 or the outer surface 206 of the cylinder 202) formed by a passageway (e.g., the triangular passageway 212). The hydraulic diameter (dH) is particularly useful for representing the size of non-circular openings and may be determined using Equation 1, below.
As shown above in Equation 1, the hydraulic diameter (dH) is defined by the ratio of the product of four (4) times the Area of the passageway aperture and the wetted perimeter. For example, the area 304 of
of the opening.
Additionally, the control valve style modifier factor (FD) is a metric that is indirectly proportional to the noise attenuation properties of an aperture and, thus, is indicative of the relative amount of noise that an aperture can attenuate. Specifically, the lower the control valve style modifier factor (FD) of an aperture the greater the amount of noise that is attenuated by the aperture. The control valve style modifier factor (FD) of a particular aperture may be determined using Equations 2 and 3 below.
As shown above in Equation 2, the control valve style modifier factor (FD) of an aperture may be determined by dividing the hydraulic diameter (dH) of an opening (e.g., one of the triangular apertures 214 of
and performing a square root operation on the quotient (e.g.,
The control valve style modifier factor (FD) may be used to design openings that result in relatively more fluid noise reduction than is achievable using known apertures. Specifically, the magnitude of the control valve style modifier factor (FD) is directly proportional to the hydraulic diameter (dH). The highest frequency that can be effectively attenuated by an aperture is inversely proportional to the hydraulic diameter (dH) of the aperture and, thus, the control valve style modifier factor (FD) of that aperture. Apertures having a relatively lower cutoff frequency attenuate relatively more noise.
An aperture effectively attenuates noise associated with frequencies above a lower cutoff frequency of an aperture. Apertures having relatively small hydraulic diameters (dH) have relatively lower cutoff frequencies than apertures of relatively larger hydraulic diameters (dH) and, thus, provide greater attenuation of aerodynamic noise generated by the fluid flow. Further, designing apertures having relatively smaller hydraulic diameters (dH) also enables forming more of those apertures in a fluid pressure reduction device, which increases the fluid flow capacity of the fluid pressure reduction device.
Although the opening areas of the triangular aperture 214 and the circular aperture 302 are equal (e.g., area=0.0123 inches2) (e.g., the triangular aperture 214 has an equivalent circular diameter (dO) (dO=0.125 inches) that is equal to the circular diameter (d=0.125 inches) of the circular aperture 302), the triangular aperture 214 is associated with a relatively lower control valve style modifier factor (FD) and a relatively larger wetted perimeter (WP).
Although the wetted perimeter (0.621 inches) of the rectangular aperture 502 is larger than the wetted perimeter (0.505 inches) of the triangular aperture 214, arranging the triangular apertures 214 in the alternating inverted pattern configuration shown in
In general, as used herein, a concave opening has at least one curvilinear side or edge. Curving a side or edge of an opening increases the length of that side or edge and, thus, contributes to increasing the overall wetted perimeter of the opening.
As shown in
Although the opening 902 occupies a total surface area, which includes an opening area 910 and a surrounding surface area 912 that is substantially similar or equal to an area 914 occupied by the substantially rectangular opening 904, the curvilinear sides 906a-d provide the opening 902 with a relatively greater wetted perimeter without increasing the required total surface area (e.g., the sum of the area 910 and the area 912).
The apertures 1302 may be arranged in an interfitted (e.g., interlocked) puzzle-like pattern configuration to form a relatively large quantity of the plurality of apertures 1302 on the example fluid pressure reduction device 1300. Although, the apertures 1302 are shown as having generally star-shaped openings 1304 having particular dimensions and proportions, other dimensions and/or proportions may also be implemented.
Returning to
The example cylinders 1402, 1404, and 1406 are arranged so that the plurality of apertures 1412, 1414, and 1416 form pre-determined flow paths through the example fluid pressure reduction device 1400. In the illustrated example, the example fluid pressure reduction device 1400 is formed by nesting, fitting, or pressing the second cylinder 1404 within the third cylinder 1406, and nesting, fitting, or pressing the first cylinder 1402 within the second cylinder 1404. In this manner, a substantial portion of the first cylinder outer surface 1420 abuts with, is in contact with, is mechanically coupled to, and/or is engaged with a substantial portion of the second cylinder inner surface 1422. Additionally, the second cylinder outer surface 1424 is adjacent to the third cylinder inner surface 1426 so that a substantial portion of the second cylinder outer surface 1424 abuts with, is in contact with, is mechanically coupled to, and/or is engaged with a substantial portion of the third cylinder inner surface 1426.
The apertures 1412, 1414, and 1416 are at least partially aligned with one another to form flow paths between the first cylinder 1402 and the third cylinder 1406 to enable fluid to flow from the inner surface 1418 of the first cylinder 1402, through the fluid pressure reduction device 1400, and toward the outer surface 1428 of the third cylinder 1406. One of ordinary skill in the art will readily appreciate that a process fluid may also flow from the outer surface 1428 of the third cylinder 1406 to the inner surface 1418 of the first cylinder 1402.
While the example fluid pressure reduction device 1400 is depicted as having three cylinders (e.g., the example cylinders 1402, 1404, and 1406 of
In the illustrated example, the dodecagonal apertures 1520 are formed using a plurality of three-disk stacks. One of the three-disk stacks includes an upper disk 1510, an intermediate or interposing disk 1512, and a lower disk 1514. The upper and lower disks 1510 and 1514 may form respective square cross-sectional areas having equal dimensions and forming the upper and lower portions of the aperture 1520. The intermediate disk 1512 forms an area having a rectangular cross-section that may have, for example, twice the cross-sectional area of either of the rectangular cross-sectional areas corresponding to the upper and lower disks 1510 and 1514. Symmetrically positioning the upper and lower disks 1510 and 1514 above and below the intermediate disk 1512 forms the cross-shaped, dodecagonal apertures 1520. Although, the plurality of apertures 1520 are shown as forming generally cross-shaped openings having particular dimensions and proportions, apertures having differently shaped openings having other dimensions and/or proportions may also be implemented using multiple stacked-disk configurations while providing relatively high wetted perimeter-to-area ratios and relatively low control valve style modifier factors (FD) to reduce fluid noise.
Alternate methods for manufacturing the example embodiment illustrated in
In alternative example implementations of the stack disk device 1500 in
Although certain apparatus, methods, and articles of manufacture have been described herein, the scope of coverage of this patent is not limited thereto. To the contrary, this patent covers all apparatus, methods, and articles of manufacture fairly falling within the scope of the appended claims either literally or under the doctrine of equivalents.
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