Set depressuring time/pressure targets for fire case.
Size restriction orifices and headers to flare.
Check minimum metal temperature during blowdown.
1. Blowdown Principles
Blowdown (depressuring) systems rapidly reduce pressure in process equipment during emergencies—typically fire exposure. The goal: reduce wall stress before fire weakens the metal to failure.
Driver
Fire case
Relieve stress before steel loses strength from heat.
Target
100 psig / 50% MAWP
Depressure to the lower value within the specified time.
Flow path
BDV → RO → KO → Flare
Valve, restriction, knockout, then to flare/header.
Control
ESD triggered
Automatic fail action on emergency shutdown signal.
Why Blowdown?
Fire case: Reduce stress before vessel wall loses strength
Hydrocarbon release: Minimize inventory available for fire/explosion
Maintenance: Depressure for safe entry or repair
Process upset: Prevent overpressure during runaway
API 521 Criteria
For fire exposure, depressure to:
Target pressure: 100 psig or 50% of design pressure (whichever is lower)
Target time: 15 minutes (typical), may vary by risk assessment
Why 15 minutes? Steel loses ~50% of its strength at 1100°F (typical fire exposure temperature). At 72% SMYS design, vessel can fail in ~15–20 minutes without depressuring.
2. Orifice Sizing
Blowdown orifice must allow adequate flow to meet depressuring time target. Size using critical flow assumption for most of blowdown duration.
Simplified Sizing Equation
For ideal gas, isothermal expansion:
A = (V / t) × ln(P1/P2) / (C × √(M/TZ))
Simplified (empirical, API 521 Annex):
A = 0.0144 × V × √(MW/T) / t × F_A
Where:
A = Orifice area (in²)
V = System volume (ft³)
P1 = Initial pressure (psia)
P2 = Final pressure (psia)
t = Depressuring time (minutes)
MW = Molecular weight
T = Temperature (°R)
F_A = Area factor (1.0 for gas-filled, higher for two-phase)
Example Calculation
Given: V = 1000 ft³, P1 = 500 psia, P2 = 115 psia, t = 15 min, MW = 20, T = 100°F
T = 100 + 460 = 560°R
ln(500/115) = 1.47
Using simplified: A = 0.0144 × 1000 × √(20/560) / 15
A = 0.0144 × 1000 × 0.189 / 15
A ≈ 0.18 in² → ½" orifice (0.196 in²)
⚠ Verify with dynamic simulation: Simplified equations assume constant T and single phase. For accurate results (especially with liquid inventory or J-T cooling), use dynamic process simulation.
01
Define targets. Set P1, P2 (100 psig or 50% MAWP), and depressuring time (e.g., 15 min).
02
Size RO. Calculate orifice area using gas properties and volume; check choked vs subcritical.
03
Verify dynamically. Simulate blowdown to capture cooling, two-phase flow, and flare backpressure.
3. Depressurization Dynamics
Pressure-Time Profile
Blowdown through a fixed orifice follows an exponential decay pattern:
P(t) = P1 × exp(-t/τ)
Where:
τ = Time constant = V / (C × A × √(T/M))
Blowdown pressure profile with exponential decay to target pressure and 15-minute benchmark.
Flow regime
Choked → subcritical
Expect critical flow early; tail is subcritical as P drops.
Flare load
Peak at t = 0
Design flare for initial choked mass flow; decay thereafter.
τ sensitivity
Volume / area
Time constant scales with inventory and restriction area.
Flow Rate During Blowdown
Phase
Flow Regime
Flow Rate Behavior
Initial (0–80%)
Critical (choked)
Flow ∝ upstream pressure
Final (80–100%)
Subcritical
Flow ∝ √(P1 - P2)
Initial Peak Flow Rate
W_initial = C × A × P1 × Kd × √(M / (T × Z))
This is the maximum flow to flare header—critical for flare sizing.
4. Low-Temperature Considerations
Rapid depressuring causes significant cooling due to Joule-Thomson effect and gas expansion work. This can cause:
Pressure and temperature vs. time during blowdown, highlighting minimum metal temperature relative to MDMT.
Mitigation Strategies
Strategy
Application
Low-temp materials
Impact-tested steel, stainless, or nickel alloys
Controlled blowdown rate
Staged orifices or larger time target
Depressure to atmosphere
Reduces J-T effect vs. flare backpressure
Heat tracing
Blowdown piping to prevent ice plugging
⚠ MDMT verification: Always calculate minimum metal temperature during blowdown. If below MDMT, upgrade materials or reduce blowdown rate. Brittle fracture is catastrophic.
5. System Design
Blowdown Valve Selection
Type: Ball valve (full-bore, low ΔP) or globe valve (throttling)
Actuator: Fail-open (spring-return) for fire case, or fail-closed with ESD override
Speed: Fast opening (<5 seconds) for emergency
SIL rating: Per risk assessment (typically SIL 2 for fire case)
Restriction Orifice
Location: Downstream of BDV (protects valve from erosion)
Type: Single-hole or multi-hole plate
Material: Stainless or stellite for erosion resistance
Sizing: Per blowdown calculation
Piping Layout
Header sizing: Limit velocity to avoid noise/vibration (<0.5 Mach)
Knockout drum: Capture any liquid carryover before flare
Slope: Drain toward KO drum
Supports: Design for thermal movement and reaction forces
Blowdown system layout: vessel isolation and BDV through RO to header, draining to KO drum and flare.
References
API 521 – Pressure-relieving and Depressuring Systems
API 520 – Sizing, Selection, and Installation of PRDs
API 537 – Flare Details for General Refinery and Petrochemical Service
NORSOK S-001 – Technical Safety
ISO 23251 – Petroleum and Natural Gas Industries—Pressure-relieving Systems