The post Solving Refinery Coating Challenges in Flow Meters appeared first on the Emerson Process Experts blog.
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Tom O’Banion Industry Director
Tom’s thoughts apply to any fluid that tends to coat or plug due to fluid velocity or temperature challenges. If the meter is coating either due to fines or temperature, then other components in the piping system will be too.
It’s quite rare that the flowmeter is the only “symptom”. It however can be the item that is the more difficult to clean or “melt out” due to tube geometry, or the difficulty in getting the solidified material re-melted.
With asphalt applications such as loading, paving machines, etc., Tom and Emerson refining industry consultants usually suggest that the meter has its own heat-tracing circuit and controller. With electrical heating, it’s easy to overheat the meter, especially is not a high-temperature version, and damage coils, magnets or RTDs.
It is best to leave this heating ON all the time, and have an insulating jacket—regardless of whether the application is intermittent or not. The cross-sectional area of the meter tubes is indeed usually smaller than the piping, so velocity is usually higher but may not be high enough—due to pressure change (delta P) concerns during sizing—to keep the meter swept clean. This is especially true of gravity-fed applications where pressure is minimal.
Refineries with “goopy” applications often flush the entire piping loop with solvent at some scheduled interval. Some refinery operations personnel monitor the meter’s drive gain (metric of how hard the meter is working) and use that to trigger the cleaning cycle.
Micro Motion Model 5700 transmitter
You can connect and interact with other refining and flow measurement experts in the Refining and Flow groups in the Emerson Exchange 365 community.