ABATEMENT OPTION
Figure 3. This trim uses a combination of approaches to avoid noise and cavitation.
ABATING NOISE AND CAVITATIONBecause the most significant source of control valve noise in liquid applications is cavitation, it makes sense to deal with abatement of noise and cavitation together. There are two basic approaches for dealing with control valve noise and cavitation:
1. Path treatment. This focuses on dampening the noise generated. It reduces the noise radiated by the piping system but doesn't eliminate cavitation inside the valve and adjacent piping.
2. Source treatment. This involves modifying the valve and its trim to decrease the cavitation intensity or prevent the existence of cavitation. Source treatment, whenever possible and feasible, is the preferred approach for addressing cavitation and the associated hydrodynamic noise because only it can avoid excessive generation of cavitation bubbles across a wide flow range.Five different methods can be used (sometimes in combination) for source treatment of hydrodynamic noise and cavitation abatement:
Velocity control. Regulating the fluid velocity, which is equivalent to controlling the pressure in the valve internals (trim), is an effective means of avoiding cavitation. The aim of this approach is to get the lowest pressure in the valve trim above the vapor pressure for the liquid in question. This is accomplished by selecting valve trim with the optimal recovery coefficient (F
L). For example, simply switching from a butterfly to a ball valve would alter the coefficient. If standard trim doesn't suffice, then we can select multistage trim that divides the valve pressure drop into several stages. There are two basic methods for pressure-drop staging:• identical pressure drop across each stage; or• identical minimum pressure in each stage.The first approach requires a constant-flow-area trim. Due to the equal area, the flow velocity in each stage is constant and the pressure drop is equal. The second approach involves an expanding-area trim, in which the pressure drop in the first stages is very high but a higher minimum pressure is maintained in the last stages, thereby better avoiding cavitation within the trim. Expanding-area trim is recommended when extensive reduction of cavitation is necessary. However, the velocity in the first stages of this trim will be quite high and may create erosion problems. In practice, valve designers usually combine the two methods to arrive at an optimum solution.
Acoustic noise and bubble size control. The division of flow into multiple small streams actually has two effects: it acts to create a pressure stage and also reduces the size of vapor bubbles in the fluid. Smaller bubbles cause higher-frequency noise fields in the fluid and reduce the external vibration intensity of the pipe as well as the mechanical and erosion effects of cavitation. The concept of using small jets to decrease control valve noise is based on the principle that the jet produces a characteristic frequency above the pipe ring frequency, thereby reducing the sound reradiated by the pipe.
Location control. This principle of flow path design directs flow in the valve away from solid boundaries so bubble implosions will have less impact and therefore less potential for causing damage.
Flat baffle plates. When the pressure drop ratio becomes very high, it's possible that anti-cavitation trim in a valve won't sufficiently lower the levels of noise and cavitation. In this case, using a baffle plate after the valve can create backpressure to reduce the pressure drop across the valve and thereby minimize noise and cavitation.A flat baffle is a flow restrictor with a custom-made constant flow area and multiple holes for a particular flow condition. The pressure drop across a baffle plate is proportional to the flow squared. Because a baffle plate is a fixed restrictor, it produces the desired pressure drop only at a single flow — the one used for sizing the baffle. A baffle plate typically is sized for the valve maximum flow. As the flow goes down, the pressure drop across the baffle decreases and the pressure drop across the valve increases. Thus, the baffle plate loses its effect at low flow rates.
Orifice plates. An orifice plate is a constant flow resistance. It only has one large hole rather than the multiple small holes in a baffle plate. An orifice plate can be used for producing linear valve installed flow characteristic and, in limited cases, for cavitation abatement. An orifice plate can be installed both upstream and downstream of a control valve. Sizing basically is similar to that of a baffle plate.
Figure 3 depicts how a Q-trim valve uses a combination of approaches, including multistage pressure drop to lower valve trim velocity and multiple-stream flow to control noise.
COMBAT CAVITATIONCavitation can cause severe damage within control valves and nearby piping due to the formation and high-intensity implosion of vapor bubbles immediately downstream of the
vena contracta. This mechanical impact damage, along with associated erosion and corrosion, can substantially impair control valve performance, resulting in lower productivity and product quality along with the added costs of product loss, labor and materials when valves fail prematurely.Predicted levels of noise (which always accompanies cavitation) correlate closely with the potential for mechanical damage. Expert sizing software may be used to simulate noise/cavitation levels under actual line conditions to arrive at the most-effective feasible abatement measures. While it may be impossible to totally eliminate cavitation in every instance, its harmful effects and associated costs always can be substantially minimized.
STEVEN HOCURSCAK is North American business manager for Neles & Mapag, Shewsbury, Mass. KYLE RAYHILL is global business manager for Neles & Mapag, Shewsbury, Mass. E-mail them at [email protected] and [email protected].