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Piping Engineering Course Notes
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Certificate Course
on
PIPING ENGINEERING
December 8 - 21, 2004
INTRODUCTION
Prof. A. S. Moharir
IIT Bombay
Organized by
Piping Engineering Cell
Computer Aided Design Centre
Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay
Powai, Mumbai - 400 076‘PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
INTRODUCTION
About two decades ago, in India, the
design procedure for piping systems for
Refineries, Petrochemicals and Fertilizer
Plants, in magnitude, depth and
complexities were not fully evolved. Only
in the recent past, we were exposed in
Getail to this field. Now we are self-
sufficient in the field of piping technology
and design.
Piping systems in a chemical plant are
comparable to the vanes and arteries
through which fluids, vapors, slurries,
solids, etc. flow under various conditions,
as imposed by the process design of the
plant. Piping network is subjected to
almost all the severest conditions of the
plant such as high temperature, préssure,
flow and combination of these. In
addition to the above, corrosion, erosion,
toxic conditions and radioactivity add to
more problems and difficulties in piping
design. With the process conditions
becoming more and more severe by the
advancement in process development, a
continuous effort is required to be carried
on simultaneously to cope up with the
demands of process. This makes the job of
a piping engineer more complex and
responsible.
Piping, because of its nature, requires
number of day to day decisions on matters
of detail, which, in some ways are often
more difficult to solve than major issues
connected with the project. It is this same
detail which can cause expensive delays in
design and construction and consequently
in commissioning. All too often in the
past, piping has been regarded as an
unimportant job in the overall project
engineering instead of being treated as a
function requiring as wide a knowledge,
experience and variety skills as any other
branch of engineering. .
In almost all chemical industries, the
installed capital cost of piping is a major
factor in plant investment, Figs. 1 and
2 show a chart based on oil refineries,
chemical and petrochemical complexes,
Fig. 1 shows that, excluding major
equipment costs, piping is the largest plant
cost component. It exceeds the next
largest component by a factor of two. It is
also observed from Fig. 3 that piping
exceeds all other field costs by a
substantial amount, Fig. 2 indicates that
design engineering utilizes approximately
45% of engineering man-hours and 50%
of these hours are used in piping design.
In addition to the above, the lost time in
piping has an effect, which goes well
beyond its direct cost, as it involves
financial loss in some proportion to the
total plant investment. The delay in and
during start up means idle capital and
losses in plant earning capacity.
In the recent years, the trend is to develop
better techniques so as to save time in
piping activities. Computer is being used
extensively to obtain rapid solutions to the
more complex problems of plant design
and, in so for as piping is concemed, to
the solving of problems of pipe stressing.
More recently, it is being employed
for production of piping detail drawings,
piping isometrics, bill of materials, cost
estimation and control. Piping engineer
has therefore a further responsibility in
understanding and application of
continually growing techniques of this
nature.PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
WHAT A PIPING ENGINEER SHOULD KNOW ABOUT
Piping engineer requires not only wide
engineering knowledge - not necessarily
in depth, but certainly in understanding -
but he must also have an understanding of
engineering economics and costs, of
metallurgy, of methods of pipe fabrication
and erection, He must have some
knowledge of industrial chemistry and
chemical engineering in addition to a
sufficient knowledge of mechanical, civil,
electrical and instrument engineering so as
to discuss requirements and problems with
specialists in these fields. This will be
more clear with the data piping
department requires from other disciplines
as given in Annexure A. He should be co-
operative, “able to communicate
effectively, lead or take part in teamwork,
be alive to the application of new
methods, materials and designs. He must
be aware of standards, codes and
practices,
There are several aspects of engineering
technology, which the piping engineer
must know something about - at
least
PIPING DESIGN FUNCTION
ORGANIZATION
The size and scale of a company or design
office do not change either the basic
piping design requirements or the
underlying design principles and practices.
As the volume of piping design work and
the number of projects executed
increases, so also does the degree of
specialization increase. Functions such as
piping layout, piping specifications, detail
drafting and material listing begin to
emerge as separate departments within the
design office. There is little apparent
similarity between piping design
sufficiently to discuss rationally, any
particular subject with specialists
concemed, More importantly, he must
have sufficient broad knowledge to know
that certain conditions can arise at the
early stages of plant design, where lack of
awareness can cause difficulties and even
disasters.
A fairly good knowledge of structural
engineering is a must. Piping in operation
is always in movement and subjected to
pressure and forces with consequent
reactions on mechanisms such as pumps,
compressors and equipment in general,
and on structures and related piping. Lack
of knowledge can cause errors sufficient
to cause machine or equipment
breakdown or to overstress and even cause
collapse of structures.
A good knowledge of safety codes and
practices is also essential.
Above all, a piping engineer should be
very well conversant with drafting
procedures and practices.
IN A SMALL AND A LARGE
organization in a small office of say, ten
men, and a large company with hundreds
of piping men, as indicated in Figs. 4 and
5, but the job performed in both cases is
identical and has the same degree of
relative importance to the whole project
design organization. The —_ real
difference lies in rate of projects passing
through the design office. In the small
office, the flow of projects is such that
each project is substantially completed
before the succeeding project commences.
This demands flexible organization of aPIPING ENGINEERING CELL
small group, who have responsibility for
all aspects of design. In the large
company, however, projects are much
more frequent, Thus the greater volume of
work handled by a large group makes a
high degree of specialization necessary for
economic and administrative reasons.
In both cases, piping design is the most
lengthy and complex part of the whole
design procedure and almost always on
the critical path of the project plan.
PIPING WITHIN THE PROJECT PLAN
Piping is an important element of every
stage of project design, purchasing and
construction. It is intimately linked to the
other project work on equipment,
electrical, instrument and civil
engineering. Work on piping is
proceeding at every stage of the project,
partly because of the sheer volume of
design and erection work, but mainly
because of the need to relate other
project activities to the piping design. A
typical activity network and bar chart for a
process plant project are shown in Figs. 6
and 7.
The activity network shows clearly the
interrelated activities of piping and other
branches of project, particularly at design
stage. It illustrates the unifying role
played by the piping engineer in acting as
a clearinghouse for data provided from
other specialist engineers. It also indicates.
the last stage of the project, when piping
erection is being carried out and when one
faces the difficulties of correcting the
design errors without delaying project
completion. Since the quantum of work
involved in piping is very extensive, the
design and erection activities of piping
appear on the critical path of this network.
The critical path planning helps in proper
allocation and utilization of manpower for
critical activities, thus avoiding
uneconomic and wasteful allocation of
resources.
RESPONSIBILITY OF A PIPING ENGINEER
"The efficiency with which the entire
systems of any particular projects work
depends upon initial phase and is in the
hands of piping analytical engineer.
Every change the engineer makes from his
base design is compounded ten folds
down stream as so many other operations
depend on his design. The analytical
design is the “BIBLE” and must be correct
in the first instance, The correctness,
thoroughness and efficiency of the design
released by the analytical engineer
determines the efficiency of the piping
design and influences, significantly, the
efficiency and quality of overall plant."
Piping engineer is responsible for a
substantial part of total project cost.
Achievement of his program timings is
critical to the completion of project in
time. In addition to his own function as a
specialist design engineer, he — must
provide a considerable amount of
information and design continuity inside
the project design organization,PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
HIS PARTICULAR CONCERNS MUST BE
‘Adequacy
% Piping design must be adequate to
meet the process specification and
physical conditions in which the plant
is to operate.
Economy
% Adequate design must be achieved at
an economic cost within the project
budget. Design cost must be
minimized by maximizing the use of
standardized methods of detailing and
data presentation.
Clarity
% Much of the piping data is derived
from and used by other engineering
departments and must be clear,
consistent and reliable.
Accuracy
% Details of piping and materials must
be complete and accurate.
Rectification of mistakes in these
activities at a later stage may prove to
be very costly and can delay project
completion.
The piping engineer has, therefore,
considerable responsibility for economic
and accurate design. Much development
of design methods and organization has
taken place over the years. In large design
organizations, techniques have emerged,
whereby procedures for producing simple
symbolic data conveying maximum
information at minimum cost can be
employed. The basic elements of these
procedures are:
D> Rapid data retrieval
D Standardization of
design methods for
material selection etc.
engineering
stressing,
> Maximum use of standards
> Symbolic drawing procedures
> Standardization of document format
for issue of piping information.
A responsible piping engineer would try
to take the maximum use of such methods
and procedures.PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
Paintil
ating, Major Equipment - 50%
‘Typical
Material Costs Major
pt, Commodities &
Piping - 23%
Insulation
Building
Structure
Foundation Flectrical
FIG.1
“Typical Contacting
Office Man-hour
Breakdown
FIG. 2
TTT
Piping 47%
‘Typical Field Labour
Cost
Major Equipment
Foundations
Electricals
' FIG.3PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
Project Dept.| Process Designers| [Design Depts.
A | Piping layouts
low Sheet pp] Plant layout &
>| Piping Details
Process Data Eqpt. layout
Material List & Summary
Purchase Requisitions
Tine Diegram| Fabrications
Programme Target Pipe System | aa
Specification
“Cost Conor
Construction
FIG. 4 PIPING DESIGN IN SMALL
ORGANIZATION
[Project Dept] | Process Equip. [Piping Design Dept]
[Design Dept| | Design
Dept 5
Flow Sheet | | Detailed Pipe | [ Line | | Plant | | Prod. | (Material
Process | |Equip. Design| [Syste | |Diagram| |Layout] | Drg | | Control
Data m Basic | |Sectio | | Section] | Section
Specs.| | Design| |
|Sectio | | Section
[741 |
lLine Diagram) | Layout | | Piping | | Bill of
'———-P | Pipe Systems| Studies psomettic |Material|
Specs. Drawing P| s Details
> or Model |
Key Plant Y
Layout Data) |__] 'y|Fabrication|
|
(eee vy
Construction}
FIG. 5 PIPING DESIGN IN LARGE ORGANIZATIONPIPING ENGINEERING CELL
Activity No. Time Scale
10 _|Taskname
[7 Process ow sheet
[72 Prat tayout
[73]! eaument Desan
[= ]rna tapout
[73 Pipe soecs
[7 o|uine Diagrams
Pra. Ch Design
3 | Working Ca Design
Prenat Design
To [Working inst. Design
Final nt Osta
Pre. Elect Desion
Waring Bact Dosign
14 |PreingLayous
18 |PiceDetas Drawing
Pipe MTO & Orders
Obiin Tenders & Select Fabicaiow:
Mat, Dative to Fabricator
To | Pipe Mat Detver to Sto
20 | Fabricated Detter izes So
| sive &Erectiine Q
22] Erect Equipment ms
23 | Erect Piping im
24 | Paint insta
25 | Test Plan Piping
2 [sirup
FIG. 6 BAR CHART FOR TYPICAL PROJECT ACTIVITY
@iping Activity Shaded)319 ‘Burdid
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‘T1dD ONIAAINIOND ONIdIdCertificate Course
on
PIPING ENGINEERING
December 8 - 21, 2004
PIPING ENGINEERING
A Major Phase in the Life Cycle of Process Plants
Prof. A. S. Moharir
IIT Bombay
Organized by
Piping Engineering Cell
Computer Aided Design Centre
Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay
Powai, Mumbai - 400 076
\/PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
PIPING ENGINEERING: A MAJOR PHASE IN THE LIFE CYCLE OF
PROCESS PLANTS
INTRODUCTION
The life of a chemical process, from
concept to commissioning and beyond,
involves almost all disciplines of
engineering. So wide is the knowledge base
requirement and so intricately integrated
these inputs from various specializations are
that they make the conventional engineering
disciplines such as chemical engineering,
mechanical engineering, —_ metallurgical
engineering, civil engineering, etc. look
artificial. A good chemical process engineer
needs to have a very broad knowledge
derived from these disciplines,
The idea of this paper is to take a
bird’s eye view of the activities during the
life cycle of a process, especially those that
concem a piping engineer.
MAJOR PHASES
The major phases in the life cycle of
‘a chemical process can be identified as:
1. Determination of Techno-economic
feasibility
2. Design Phase
3. Construction Phase
4. Commissioning Phase
5. _ Operation/Production Phase
A piping engineer has an important role to
play during phases 2-5.
1. TECHNO-ECONOMIC
FEASIBILITY
Except perhaps in the early days of
metallurgical industry, economic gain has
been a major consideration in the choice and
scale of a production activity. Risk factor
and pollution considerations seem to be
gaining importance, but these are also due to
economic considerations to a large extent,
PROF. A.S. MOHARIR
Indian Institute of Technology
because ignoring these may lead to penalties
in future as harsh as having to top the
activity. So, economics remains the guiding
principle. There is nothing to wrong with it
because such a profit motive has led to great
technological innovations.
For new products, _ technical
feasibility is an important first aspect to
study. This can comprise of
Chemical Path Feasibility
Engineering/Technological
Feasibility
For the first part, especially in the
area of organic synthesis, reaction path
synthesis algorithms are available. These
would short-list a few routes for synthesis
which are thermodynamically feasible. Every
thermodynamically feasible reaction need
not necessarily be practical because for
practicality,.it is essential that the reaction
takes place at a suitable rate. Too fast
reactions may lead to operation/control
problems while too slow reactions may
require huge equipment to be able to process
commercial quantities. Means of
promoting/inhibiting reaction rates(catalysts)
aro often required. A major portion of
reactions in chemical industry are catalytic
in nature. A general view of any chemical
process plant can be a reactor at the heart and
other units necessary to prepare feed for the
reactor or process output from the reactor.
Once a chemical route which is
thermodynamically and kinetically feasible
is chosen, a block flow diagram(BFD),
which can be said to be the first engineering
diagram in the life cycle of a process, can be
prepared. It simply shows the operations that
are involved in the feed preparation sectionPIPING ENGINEERING CELL
and product treatment section of a process
and the general sequence of events. The
operations could be heat removal or addition,
mixing or separation, pumping/compressing,
etc. For a given scale of operation and
estimated or expected performance levels of
the equipment to be later selected for these
operations, one can put first estimates of
stream characteristics such as flow rates,
composition, temperatures, pressure etc. on
the BFD. With this, the process can be s:
to be bom in two dimensions.
The chemically feasible route is yet
to be tested for its technical and economic
viability.
‘At a broad level, a decision as to the
desirability of batch operation, continuous
operation or a combination has to be taken,
Scale is an important issue here, but not the
only one. Some operations are inherently
batch/semibatch in nature, e.g. adsorption.
The portion of the flowsheet involving batch
operation must operate in that mode. It can
suitably coexist with upstream/downstream
continuous operation through provision of
suitably sized storage tanks which do the job
of isolating the batch operation section from
the continuous one.
Some operations are feasible in batch
as well as continuous mode but strict quality
control (absence of byproducts due to side
reactions etc.) or variations in feed/products
specifications etc. may tilt the scale in favour
of batch operation. For the same scale of
‘operation, batch process equipment result in
much larger process fluid inventory in the
plant at any time. If the fluids being handled
are hazardous, it would mean that potential
hhazards are higher in batch operation vis-a-
vis continuous operation. This aspect is
assuming more and more importance in the
emerging zero-risk scenario.
‘Once the operations and the mode in
which these are to be carried out are
determined, the actual methods of achieving
results of an operation are to be decided. The
total mass is obviously conserved in any
process including the chemical processes.
All operations in chemical processes wherein
the masses of individual components are also
conserved are termed as unit operations. This
would necessitate that no chemical
transformations take place during these
operations. Phase change, is however, not
excluded, Pipe flow, pumping, compression,
mixing, evaporation, distillation, extraction,
etc. are unit operations in this sense.
The heart of any chemical process, a
reactor, is however, an operation where the
total mass is conserved but the species mass
is not. Some or all the species undergo
chemical transformations, These are called
unit processes. For example, nitration,
oxidation, hydrogenation, chlorination,
esterification are called unit processes.
The operations in a process as
identified in the BFD may be carried out by
one or more candidate unit operations. For
example, a component from a mixture may
be separated by distillation or crystallization
or adsorption. Which choice is the best (from
economic point of view)? Is a parallel or
series combination of altematives a better
solution?
Even after selecting the appropriate
unit operation, one may have to converge on.
the appropriate implementation strategies.
For example, a four component mixture may
be separated by multiple distillation columns
in several possible ways. Which one of these
options is the best for a given situation?
In case of reactors, choice of
equipment is equally important. A fluid
phase reaction, for example may be carried
out in a tubular reactor with or without
recycle, a stirred pot or a combination. A
reaction involving solid catalyst may be
carried out in a packet bed, moving bed,
basket type reactor, a fluidized bed reactor, a
riser reactor, ete. Which one of these options
is the best for a given situation?PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
Plant cost and operating cost are two
components to be considered in the choice of
equipment. It is possible to pose the problem
as an optimization problem (cost.
minimization), the solution of which gives
cost optimal flowsheet configuration. This
phase of flowsheet development is called
“Process Synthesis” and widely accepted
CAD tool in chemical engineering.
Mathematically, these are MILP (Mixed
Integer Linear Programming) or MINLP
(Mixed Integer Non-Linear Programming)
problems.
Selection of other pieces of
equipment such as pumps, reboilers, heat
exchangers can be taken up at and
considered as a part of process synthesis
stage or postponed to a later stage.
Chemical processes are generally
energy intensive, With the rising energy cost,
attention has recently tumed to minimization
of external energy requirement. These are
cooling water, steam, heating oil etc., the so
called utility steams. It is essential to
minimize utility requirement by encouraging
as much process stream to process stream
heat transfer as possible within operational
and layout constraints, These problems are
also mathematically posed as MILP and
MINLP and are called as HEN (Heat
Exchanger Network) Synthesis problem.
With these process synthesis tasks
accomplished, conceptual design stage of the
process is over. The equipment have been
selected and roughly their capacities are
known, The capital cost and the operating
costs can be estimated. This information
coupled with the raw material availability
and cost and the demand and market prices
of products and byproducts would help in
establishing the economic feasibility of the
process. A techno-economically feasible
process is now ready to enter the design
phase.
2. DESIGN PHASE
The objective of the design phase is
to carry out rigorous _ engineering
calculations for the chemical engineering
aspects as well as mechanical engineering
aspects and come out with rigorous
documents (text, drawings) so that the
implementation details can be passed on to
the subsequent phases in the life cycle.
It must be remembered that just as it
is important to know what is happening
inside a particular piece of,
equipment(chemical engineering), it is
equally important to know whether the
mechanical design and metallurgy of the
confining vessel are adequate to allow this to
happen without risks to the other flowsheet
components and to the external world. The
issues are inseparably involved and chemical
and mechanical engineering have to go hand-
in-hand. Unfortunately, that is normally not
the case,
The design phase has essentially two
components; the process design and the
mechanical design.
Process is the detailed material and
energy balance calculation across the process
flowsheet. It would also establish the
operating conditions, equipments size(not
necessarily shape), utility requirements, etc.
With this information appended to the BFD,
one gets a Process Flow Diagrams(PFD).
For example, process design of a
distillation column would mean calculating
the number of trays, feed tray locations,
draw locations, draw locations, condenser
and reboiler duties, reflux ratio, etc. The heat
exchanger process design would mean
calculating the operating temperature,
pressure, reactor volume, reactor heat
removal/addition requirements, etc. These
operating/design conditions canbe
calculated to satisfy some criterion such as
minimum operating cost or minimum
impurities or minimum pollution or
maximum conversion to desired cproduct or
a combination of these.PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
These decisions which help to zarrive
at optimal design and not only workable
designs are possible only by creating and
answering what-if situations around each
equipment or part ot whole of the flowsheet.
For example, we need to try different feed
locations for a distillation column, different
reflux ratios etc. and see how the steady state
performance(top or bottom composition)
changes. A feed location and/or reflux ratio
which gives the desired performance is one
of the candidate designs. There may be
several such designs. The one which is
optimum in some sense is then chosen,
Prediction of performance for inputed
design and operating conditions by solving
phenomenological equations. of any
operation on computer is called simulation.
Programs which can do it for the whole
flowsheet simultaneously are flowsheeting
programmes. They are also termed as steady
state simulators because they simulate only
the steady state performance of a process
flow sheet.
Simulation based process design
completes one very important phase in the
life cycle of a chemical process. The
equipment types and sizes, all stream
specifications (Flow rate, composition,
temperature, pressure), operating conditions
are known at this stage. This, when
incorporated in Bfd, converts it to a PFD, an
important engineering diagram. It is still 2-
D, but since it has significantly more
information content, let us call it a 21/4-D
drawing. This is often considered as an end-
product of a conventional chemical engineer.
Although widely used in process
design, steady state stimulators do not help
in decision making during several important
stages of a chemical process. The important
ones start up and shut down, transition phase
during fecasiock and product changeover,
relief and blow down, control systems
synthesis and design, Hazard and Operability
(HAZOP) studies, etc. These situations
require the knowledge of dynamics of a
process. Dynamic process simulators are
being developed and slowly getting
acceptance as decision making tools in these
areas,
Although designed for steady state
operations, truly speaking, no process
operates at a steady state. This is because
there could be disturbances (may be with
zero mean) beyond the control of operators.
Even if we have a tight hold on everything,
the ambient conditions (temperature, wind
velocity) change from time to time. This
changes the amount of heat ingress or egress
from the equipment and pipelines which
affect the energy balance of the whole
system and system performance would vary
if no counter measures are taken. This is the
job of suitably chosen controllers.
Control system design is an
important area. System identification,
modeling, manipulated-controlled variable
pair selection, controller _ selection,
controllability evaluation are important
areas, Dynamic simulation packages need to
bbe used for this purpose so that CSSD can be
done at process design stage.
HAZOP is another important and
now mandatory activity. It is a qualitative,
experience intensive exercise as of now. It is
in the form of deviation analysis. After the
process design, the steady _—_state
specifications of each stream in the
tlowsheet are known. The HAZOP team
exhaustively asks itself questions as to what
will happen if these specification deviate
from the expected steady state value. It
debates the possible causes and
consequences of each such eventuality.
Anything which appears to them as likely to
ead to hazardous situation is debated further
and possible means of avoiding the same or
raising alarm if it happens so that remedial
action can be taken etc. are recommended.
This may lead to recommendation of
additional instrumentation on lines andPIPING ENGINEERING CELL
equipment, high-low alarms and trips ete.
which may be required to be provided.
The idea of HAZOP is to foresee
hazardous situation and take measures and
abundant precaution to avoid them and
increase process safety.
The requirement of monitoring
instruments for providing signals to
controllers or also to continuously monitor
process performance is identified.
The PFD shows the flow rates,
composition, temperature and pressure of ail
feed, product and intermediate streams. The
properties of these streams such as density
and velocity can therefore be calculated,
Hydraulic calculations to decide the pressure
drop due to flow from one unit to another
can be done at this stage. Pipe sizing which
is a balance between operating cost (energy
lost due to flow in pipes) and capital cost
(function of pipe diameter, thickness and
pipe run) can be carried out.
The pressure drop correlation to be
used depends on the nature of flowing
medium: incompressible, compressible,
slurry, two-phase, three-phase, etc.
Reasonably good correlation are
available for calculating pressure drop for
single phase compressible or incompressible
fluid flow. For two-phase flow, correlations
are available but their predictive power is
doubtful. Possibility of various flow regimes,
uncertainties regarding regime transition
boundaries and lack of data make prediction
flow hydraulics very difficult for two and
multiphase flow. All one can do is to use the
best available correlation. Unfortunately, a
large percentage of flow situations in
industry are atleast two-phase flows.
The HAZOP findings, process
requirement or the available reliability data
may require a standby unit provision in the
flowsheet. This is quite often the case with
pumps. These call for appropriate piping
also.
To make sure that a batch or semi-
batch operation can coexist with upstream
and/or downstream continuous units, storage
tanks need to be provided as was mentioned
earlier.
Sometime, a particular requirement of an
equipment may call for such a provision, for
example, to ensure that the pump suction
does not run dry in the event of upstream
process upsets. © Start-up ot shut-down
conditions may also call for intermediate
storage tanks.
A PED modified further to indicate
stand-by equipment, storage tanks,
instrumentation and control, pipe sizes,
valves, etc. becomes a P&ID. It may also
show relative elevation of various
equipment, number of trays and feed tray
location in a distillation column, etc.
P&ID is a very important schematic
during the design stage process. In fact this
is what is stored and updated throughout the
life of a process. It is considered as a
cardinal drawing for various sections in a
design organization. It also is the basic
drawing for subsequent equipment design,
plant layout, piping layout, bill of
material(BOM), insulation calculations, etc.
Project engineering literally begins with this
mother drawing in hand.
Piping Engineer must be thoroughly
conversant with P&ID. Each organization
may have its own nomenclature and
practices for making P&IDs, But the
differences are mostly in representation and
not in the information content,
P&ID also shows the other details of
the pipe lines such as material of,
construction, service, etc. The material of
construction can be decided based on the
fluid that a pipeline is supposed to carry and
the temperature-pressure conditions. The
materials of construction for equipment
similarly are service dependent.
Although a piping engineer begins
with P&ID, it would be desirable if he hasPIPING ENGINEERING CELL
some knowledge of the process background
which led to P&ID.
At this stage, the capacity of each
equipment, the temperature- pressure that it
needs to withstand, the material of
construction, the inlet-outlet ports and their
sizes that need to be provided, the necessary
details of other internals/extemnals(such as
trays in a distillation column, packing in an
absorber, stirrer in a reactor, jacket around
kettle etc.) are available. The detailed
mechanical design of each equipment
leading of fabrication drawing can be taken
up.
The equipment design falls in the
area of pressure vessel design. The pressure
vessels are classified as fired and unfired
depending on whether they come in contact
with naked flame or not. Vessels subjected to
inside pressure higher than the ambient(eg.
vacuum service) are to be designed
separately. There are separate design
formulae for vessels subjected to internal and
external pressure.
Typical vessel shapes used in process
industry are cylindrical and spherical,
Spherical shells are self-closing while two
ends of a cylindrical shell need to be closed
using closures of appropriate _ shapes.
Depending on shell dimensions and service
conditions, the closures. may be
hemispherical, ellipsoidal, _torrisperical,
conical or flat.
The ciosures need to be tightly fixed
to the shell, Flanges “are provided on the
closure and the shell for this purpose.
Various types of flanges are possible and
appropriate choice is important. Ingress of
ambient air in the vessel or egress of inside
fluid to the atmosphere must be avoided.
Apart from loss of material and/or off-spec
product, such a leakage could be hazardous.
If flange surfaces were pressed against each
other, no matter how well they are machined,
the flanges would leak. This is so because of
the microscopic irregularities on the flange
surface, which act as channels for leakage.
These channels need to be blocked by
providing a softer material which is squeezed
between the two flanges so as to flow and
seal the imegularities on the flange surface.
The gasket must flow but not be squeezed
out of flanges during bolting up conditions.
Also during operation, some of the bolt
tension and pressure on gasket is reduced.
The gasket should still not leak.
The pressure vessel design would
involve calculating the shell wall thickness,
closure type selection and thickness.
calculations, selection of suitable gasket
material with adequate yield stress and
gasket factor, choice of gasket location{mean
gasket diameter), gasket thickness, gasket
width, placement of bolts (bolt circle
diameter), bolt material selection, number of
bolts, diameter of bolts etc. But this is not
all,
A vessel needs to have openings to
serve as inlet, outlet ports as well as for
drainage, hand holes, man holes, etc. these
could be on the shell or closures. The shell
and closure wall thickness have been
designed to ensure that the stresses in the
walls even at the weakest ports (along
welding, along longitudinal seam or girth
seam) do not cross the allowable stress value
even afier corrosion or inspite of nonuniform
plate thickness (mill tolerance), ete. When
openings are cut, stresses concentrate along
the edges of the opening and may exceed
allowable stress value. Provision of extra
thickness to counter this may be expensive.
‘The theoretical finding that the stress
concentration is confined to a circle double
the opening diameter is used to strengthen
the shell wall only in that region by welding
a pad around the opening. The thickness
calculation of such a reinforcing pad is a part
of pressure vessel calculation.
Not every opening need to be
compensated. In the pressure vessels
subjected to internal pressure, tensile stressesPIPING ENGINEERING CELL
are developed in the wall. In case of vessels
subjected to extemal pressure, compressive
stresses are developed. The vessel wall
would have a tendency to buckle, To avoid
this, stiffening rings may be provided.
Spacing between stiffening rings and cross-
section geometry of the stiffening ring are to
be designed ‘using appropriate design
procedures.
Stiffning rings may be provided
extemally or intemally. Intemal stiffening
rings may also be used as tray supports in
distillation columns, etc.
‘Above design procedures may
normally be adequate for not so tall vessels.
For tall vessels which may most adequately
be called towers, several other considerations
come into picture.
Tougher distillations require lot of
trays in the column requiring to install very
tall columns. Tall column design is thus
important.
The wind velocities increase as one
goes away from ground level. A tall column
with its insulation, platforms and ladders
provide obstruction to wind which im tum
exerts force on the column, The column
firmly supported at the skirt top bends as a
result. This induces tensile stresses along the
longitudinal seam on the leeward side. These
additional stresses along with the stresses
due to internal pressure should not cross the
allowable value. This may have to be
ensured by provision of additional shell wall
thickness. The thickness requirement is
lowest at the top. To” minimize metal
requirement, the tower may be divided into
sections with the bottommost section having
highest thickness and the top just enough to
withstand internal pressure.
Tall tower design also needs to be
checked for seismic effects which induce
additional stresses along longitudinal seam
The seismic zone and the period of vibration
decide the seismic coefficient. Wall
thickness may have to amended to take care
of seismisity.
It is assumed that highest wind load
and worst seismic effects do not occur
simultaneously.
The vibration period and deflection
of tall columns also need to be kept within
tolerable limits. This can be done by
providing a suitably thick skirt.
Eccentric loads on the column due to
side connection also cause bending moment
at the skirt column connection and need to be
considered.
‘Afler attention is paid to each and
every aspect, a pressure vessel fabrication
drawing is issued for fabrication to begin at
an early stage. Equipment fabrication is time
consuming. Also, in the field work,
equipment need to be in place quite early
because only then the pipe routing job
begins.
Pipe wall thickness design is
similarly carried out by treating pipes as
cylindrical vessels. Flange calculations need
not be done in the case of pipes as these are
provided by the codes in most cases. Once
the nominal diameter and schedule of all
pipes in a plant are known, a first bill of
material for pipe length requirement can be
prepared. This is even before the actual
routing and isometries are frozen. Additional
quantities can be procured once the 3-D
layout is finalized.
In all the above calculations, design
pressure and design temperature have to be
suitably chosen. For the equipment,
hydrostatic test pressures are also to be
recommended.
With the completion of these
calculations and the design documents, the
design phase can be said to be over. The
pipeline routing is however not yet decided.
3. CONSTRUCTION PHASE
Further analytical work needs to bePIPING ENGINEERING CELL
done before the final blue print of 3-D plant
layout is finalized and construction begins.
Some of the activities given here may well
be considered as belonging to the design
phase itself, They are given here mainly
because plant site details are a part of inputs
to the decision making.
The choice of plant location,
if such a choice exists, is governed by
politico-socio-economic considerations. The
basic approach is to assign weight factors to
various considerations and to select a site
which scores maximum points.
Knowing the site and its
neighborhood, a plant layout can be worked
Out. Sites of the major equipment have to be
decided on the site map. Apart from the
equipment and offsites, other requirements
such as control room, fire station, hospital
etc. are decided at this stage. The road map
Of the site also emerges. Certain rules for
inter-unit distance which emerged from past
experiences, certain guidelines for dusty,
fire-prone, noisy, hazardous equipment
location are adhered to.
A piping engineer is deeply
involved in plant layout as it is one of the
most important factor which govems the
piping layout and piping costs.
It is important to orient the
properly at it’s assigned site. This
activity is called unit layout or equipment
layout, Accessibility, ease of maintenance,
implications on piping layout, ete. are the
considerations here. Each equipment has to
be given individual attention by always
keeping in mind that it is a member of the
whole, Guidelines have emerged based on
past practices and experiences.
‘A piping engineer is again deeply
involved in unit layout as it has more direct
influence on the piping layout, which is the
next activity
After the units have been located and
appropriately oriented on paper, the layout of
the veins and arteries of the plant, the pipes,
have to be laid out, It is not as simple as
connecting the outlet of one equipment to the
inlet of the next in operational sequence by
the shortest possible route. In fact, such
direct connections are exceptional. And with
reason!
Most industrial hazards originate
with failure of the piping system. The
equipment are fairly rigid and have strong
foundation. During the cold assembly, all
pieces are in place. When the operation
begins, the high pressure temperature
conditions inside the equipment induce
stresses and things literally move. Pipelines
being the most delicate elements in the plant,
bear the brunt of these operational loads. It is
therefore essential that each pipeline routing,
especially the critical long ones, is properly
designed so that the pipe can sustain the
operational load, The load due to the weight
of the fluid carrying pipe, vibrations in the
equipment to which it is connected, thermal
expansion etc. collectively and should not
lead to stresses in the pipe exceeding the
allowable limits during operation.
Weight analysis and stress analysis
need to be carried out on pipeline. It may
lead to the requirement of rerouting the
pipeline, or provision of supports, hangars,
expansion bellows, etc. stress analysis is now
facilitated by computer packages, However,
analysis of the stress distribution chumned out
by these packages for a complex pipe routing
is the job of a piping engineer. Piping iayout
is an exclusive domain of a piping engineer.
Not many get exposure to it during their
career as piping engineer.
A software model of 3-D layout of a
plant is gaining imporatnce. Unlike P&ID
which is schematic, a 3-D model is a
dimensional graphics and can be made in all
details of the envisaged plant, It offers easy
visualization of the plant structure. It allows
checks on ergonomics. In conjunction with
stress analysis software, each pipeline can be
checked for adequate flexibility and its routePIPING ENGINEERING CELL
if called for. Details of civil structure can be
checked and corrected. Isometric drawings
of each pipeline can be derived from 3-D
drawings with ease. Orthographic drawings
in different views can be created.
The 3-D software model has all the
details of plant including actual pipe routing,
Bill of material for pipes and_ piping
elements (pipe run, piping elements such as
elbows, tees, specialties, flanges, valves etc.)
procured equipments (pumps etc.) can be
easily extracted.
The progress of -—_project
implementation can be monitored using 3-D
rawings and field information,
Specification sheet for piping
elements can be prepared using a 3-D model.
3D model of the plant is complete
database and visual of the plant that would
be. Its use would increase in coming years.
‘The construction phase involves the
actual placement of equipment and routing
pipelines. Welding and fabrication, painting
for corrosion prevention, thermal insulation
to prevent heat ingress or egress are the field
activities that a piping engineer need to be
familiar with,
4, COMMISSIONING
If the entire design has been done
scientifically, if design intentions are
reflected in various design documents
correctly, if fabrication, erection and
assembly have been done as per design
intentions, then commissioning which
involves taking the cold-assembled plant to
go on-stream and produce design capacity
should be smooth affair. This is normally not
the case because lots of adhoc decisions need
to be taken on field during erection to take
care of fabrication errors, late or non-
delivery of items or design errors which are
made at early stages of project engineering
or even late second thoughts. The project is
normally on the critical path during field
work and not all these decisions and their
implications are thoroughly probed,
Another reason why commissioning
is tough is that the start-up conditions are
significantly different than steady state
conditions for which the plant has been
designed.
Dynamic simulation is a good tool to
evolve a good start-up policy. It is, however,
not used much of today. Start-up procedures
for common unit operations such as
distillation are fairly well tested, though not
necessarily optimal.
A piping engineer may be involved in
star-up to take care of mechanical design
problems that may crop up. Some process
knowledge would be desirable.
5. NORMAL OPERATION PHASE
The problems during the production
phase of plant are mostly operational if it
has been designed well. ‘The need to
debottleneck and optimize on throughput,
however, calls for minor/major changes
involving installation of additional
equipment or bypassing an existing
equipment and related changes in pipe
routing, These changes may be trivial from
process point of view but not necessarily
from the mechanical design implications
point of view. A trivially simple change may
lead to stresses crossing failure limits and
causing disaster. A healthy operating
practice would require a piping engineer to
be associated with any hardware change or
operating point shift during productive pai
of the life cycle of a plant.
A piping engineer is also a
part of HAZOP team. He is also involved in
accident review.
IN CONCLUSION, A PIPING
ENGINEER IS INVOLVED I A
MAJOR PORTION OF THE LIFE
CYCLE OF A PROCESS. HIS
‘RESPOSIBILITIES AND SCOPE OF
ACTIVITIES MAKE THE
NOMENCLATURE “PIPING
ENGINEER” 4 MISNOMER.Certificate Course
on
PIPING ENGINEERING
December 8 - 21, 2004
CODES AND STANDARDS
T.N. Gopinath
Consultant
Organized by
Piping Engineering Cell
Computer Aided Design Centre
Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay
Powai, Mumbai - 400 076PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
CODES AND STANDARDS.
T.N. GOPINATH
For scientific design of Piping Systems, selection of proper material of
construction and to detail out the material specifications, knowledge of Codes and
Standards is essential. Standardization can, and does, reduce cost, inconvenience, and
confusion that result from unnecessary and undesirable differences in systems,
components and procedures. Industry standards-are published by professional societies,
committees and trade organizations. A code is basically a standard that has been
generally accepted by the government. The objective of each code is to ensure public and
industrial safety in a particular activity or equipment. Codes are often developed by the
same organization that develop standards. These organizations also develop good
engineering practices and publish as Recommended Practices. The intent of these
documents is misunderstood since definition of Codes, Standards and Recommended
Practices are not always correctly understood. The following definitions are generally
accepted.
CODE
A group of general rules or systematic procedures for design, fabrication,
installation and inspection prepared in such a manner that it can be adopted by legal
jurisdiction and made into law.
STANDARDS
Documents prepared by a professional group or committee who are believed to be
good and proper engineering practice and which contain mandatory requirements. The
‘users are responsible for the correct application of the same. Compliance with a standard
does not itself confer immunity from legal obligation.
RECOMMENDED PRACTICES
Documents prepared by professional group or committee indicating good
engineering practices but which are optional.
Companies also develop Guides in order to have consistency in the
documentation. These cover various engineering methods, which are considered good
practices, without specific recommendation or requirements.
Codes and Standards as well as being regulations, might be considered as “design
aids” since they provide guidance from experts.
Each country has its own Codes and Standards. On global basis, American
National standards are undoubtedly the most widely used and compliance with those
requirements are accepted world over. In India, other than American standards, British
standards and Indian standards are also used for the design and selection of equipment
and piping systems. The major organizations for standards are;
Codes and Standards uPIPING ENGINEERING CELL
MAJOR ORGANISATION FOR STANDARDS
S.No. Country Organization ‘Abbreviation
T United States ‘American National | ANST
Standards Institute
2 Canada Standard Couneil of Canada | SCC
3 France ‘Association Francaise | AFNOR
4 United British Standards BSI
Kingdom Institute
3 Europe Committee of European | CEN
Normalization
6 Germany Deutsches Institute Fur | DIN
‘Normung
7 Tapan Japanese Industrial | JISC
Standards Committee
3 Tadia Bureau Of Indian Standards | BIS
9 Worldwide Tntemational Organization | ISO
for Standards
ISO is a worldwide federation of national standards bodies from some
100 countries, one from each country.
1.0_AMERICAN STANDARDS
Not all American standards are issued directly by American National Standards
Institute. The material standards are covered under ASTM (American Society for Testing
and Materials) and dimensional standards under ANSI (American National Standards
Institute). Most of these standards are adapted by ASME (American Society of
‘Mechanical Engineers).
‘The American Standards referred by Piping Engineers are mainly the standards by:
1.1 The American Petroleum Institute (API)
1.2. The American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI)
1.3. The American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
1.4 The American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM).
1.5. The American Welding Society (AWS).
1.6 The American Water Works Association (AWWA).
1.7 The Manufacturers Standardization Society of Valves and Fitting Industry —
Standard Practices (MSS-SP)
Codes and Standards 2PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
1.8 The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
L.l_API STANDARDS
The generally referred API standards by the Piping Engineers are :
y
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
2
8)
9%)
10)
)
12)
13)
1.2_AISI STANDARDS
APISL
API 6D
API 6F
API 593,
API 598
API 600
API 601
API 602
API 603
API 604
API 607
API 609
API 1104 -
Specification for Line Pipe
Pipe line Valves, End closures, Connectors and Swivels.
Recommended Practice for Fire Test for valves.
Ductile Iron Plug Valves — flanged ends.
Valve Inspection and Test.
Steel Gate Valves «
Metallic Gasket for Refinery piping
Compact Design carbon steel Gate.
Corrosion Resistant Gate Valves
Ductile Iron Gate Valves ~ flanged ends.
Fire test for soft-seated ball valves
Butterfly valves
Standard for welding pipeline and facilities.
The American Iron and Steel Institute Standards specifies the material by its
chemical and physical properties. When specific mode of manufacture of the element is
not the concern, then the material can be identified by the AISI standards. The most
commonly used AISI specifications are:
1) AISI 410
2) AISI 304
3) AISI316
Codes and Standards
13% Chromium Alloy Steel
18/8 Austenitic Stainless Steel
18/8/3 Austenitic Stainless SteelPIPING ENGINEERING CELL
1.3 _ANSISTANDARDS
The American National Standards Institute’s standards used in the design of the
Piping Systems are as listed. In 1978,ANSI B31 committee was reorganized as ASME
Code for Pressure Piping B31 committee. Subsequently the code designation was
changed. ASME B31 Code for pressure piping is at present a non-mandatory code in
USA, though they are adopted as legal requirement.
1) ASME B31 - —— PowerPiping
2) ASME B31.2 - Fuel Gas Piping
3) ASME B313 - Process Piping
4) ASME B314 - _ Pipeline Transportation System for liquid
hydrocarbon and other Liquids
5) ASME B315 - _ Refrigeration Piping
6) ASME B318 - Gas Transmission and Distributor Piping Systems.
7) ASME B31.9 - Building Services Piping
8) ASME B31.11 Slurry Transpiration Piping Systems
9) ASME B31.G- Manual for determining the remaining strength of
corroded piping - A supplement to ASME B31.
Of the above, the most commonly used code is ASME B 31.3. Refineries and chemical
plants are designed based on the same. All power plants are designed as per ASME
B3LI.
SELECTION OF DESIGN CODE
Unless agreement is specifically made between the contracting parties to use another
issue or the regulatory body having jurisdiction imposes the use of another issue, the
latest edition and addenda issued 6 months prior to the original contract date will hold
good for the first phase of the completion of work and initial operation.
It is the responsibility of the user to select the Code Section, which most nearly applies to
1 proposed piping installation.
Factors to be considered include:
Technical limitations of the Code Section, jurisdictional requirements and the
applicability of other’Codes and Standards. All applicable requirements of the selected
Code shall be met. For some installations, more than one Code Section may apply to
different parts of the installation. The user is responsible for imposing requirements
Codes and Standards .PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
supplementary to those of the Code if necessary to assure safe piping for the proposed
installation.
‘When no section of the Code specifically covers proposed installation, the user has the
discretion to select any section determined to be generally applicable. However, it is
cautioned that supplementary requirements to the section chosen may be necessary to
provide for safe piping system for the intended application.
The Code sets forth engineering requirements deemed necessary for the safe design and
construction of pressure piping. While safety is the basic consideration, this factor alone
will not necessarily govern the final specification for any piping installation.
The Code prohibits designs and practices known to be unsafe and contains wamings
where caution, but not prohibition, is warranted. The designer is cautioned that the
Code is not a design handbook; it does not do away with the need for the engineer or
competent engineering judgement.
Other major ANSI / ASME dimensional standards referred for the piping elements are:
1) ASMEB1.1 - Unified Inch Screw Threads
2) ASME B 1.20.1
Pipe Threads general purpose ~
(Ex ANSI B2.1)
3) ASME B16.1
Cast Iron Pipe Flanges and Flanged Fittings
4) ASME B 163 Malleable Iron Threaded Fittings.
5) ASME B 16.4
Cast Iron Threaded Fittings
6) ASME B165 Steel Pipe flanges and Flanged Fittings
7) ASME B 16.9
Steel Butt welding Fittings
8) ASME B 16.10 Face to face and end to end dimensions of
Valves
9) ASME B 16.11 Forged steel Socket welding and Threaded
fittings
10) ASME B 16.20
Metallic Gaskets for pipe flanges ~ ring
joint, spiral wound and jacketed flanges
11) ASMEB 16.21
Non Metallic Gasket for pipe flanges
Codes and Standards ~PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
12) ASMEB 16.25 - Butt Welding Ends
13) ASMEB 16.28 - Short Radius Elbows and Returns
14) ASMEB 1634 - Steel Valves, flanged and butt welding ends.
15) ASMEB 1642 - Ductile Iron Pipe Flanges & Flanged
Fittings ~Class 150 and 300
16) ASMEB 16.47 - Large Diameter Steel Flanges — NPS 26-60
17) ASMEB 1649 - Buttwelding Induction Bends for Transportation
and Distribution System
18) ASMEB 18.21&2- Square and hexagonal head Bolts and Nuts —
(in & mm)
19) ASMEB 36.10 - —_ Welded and seamless Wrought Steel Pipes
20) ASMEB36.19 - Welded and Seamless Austenitic Stainless
Steel Pipes.
1.4_ASTM STANDARDS
ASTM standards consist of 16 sections on definitions and classifications of
materials of construction and test methods. Most of the ASTM standards are adapted by
ASME and are specified in ASME Section II. The Section II has four parts.
14.1 Part-A = Ferrous materials specifications
142 Part-B - _ Non-ferrous metals specification
3 Part-C - Specification for welding materials
144 Part-D - Properties of materials.
In Part-II, the materials are listed in the Index based on the available forms such as plates,
castings, tubes, etc. and also on the numerical index.
The selection of ASTM specification depends upon the type of manufacture, form
of material, its mechanical strength and the corrosion properties.
The specification number is given on Alphabetical prefix, ‘A’ for Ferrous materials
and ‘B® for Non-ferrous materials
ASTM also specifies standard practice for numbering metal and alloys as Unified
Numbering System.
INIFIED NUMBERING SYSTEM (UNS)
The UNS number itself is not a specification, since it establishes no requirements
for form, condition, quality etc. It is a unified identification of metals and alloys for
which controlling limits have been established in specification elsewhere.
Codes and Standards cPIPING ENGINEERING CELL
The UNS provides means of correlating many naturally used numbering systems
currently administered by Societies, trade associations, individual users and producers of
metals and alloys, thereby avoiding confusion caused by use of more than one
identification number for the same material and by the opposite situation of having the
same number assigned to two different materials.
UNS establishes 18 series numbers of metals and alloys. Each UNS number
consists of a single letter prefix followed by five digits. In most cases the alphabet is
suggestive of the family of the metal identified.
1, 00001 - A999 - Aluminium and Aluminium alloys
2. C00001 - C 99999 - Copper and Copper alloys
3. £00001 - £99999 - Rare earth and rare earth like metals and
alloys
4, 100001 - L 99999 - Low melting metals and alloys
5. MO00001- M99999 = -—Miscellaneous nonferrous metals and alloys
6. No00001- N99999 - -—_Nickel and Nickel alloys
7. P00001- P99999 = Precious metals and alloys
8. ROOOO1- R999 - Reactive and Refractory metals and alloys
9. Z00001 - Z 99999 - — Zine and Zine alloys
10. D00001- D99999 = -—_Specified mechanical properties of Steels
11, FOOL - F99999 = ~—Cast Iron and Cast Steels
12, G00001 - G99999 = =~ ATS and SAE Carbon and Alloy steels
13. HO0001 - H99999 = - =~ AISTH Steels
14, Jo0001 - 399999 - Cast Steels
15, KO0001- K99999 -_-——Miscellaneous Steels and Ferrous alloys
16. $00001- $ 99999 - Stainless Steels
17. To0001- 7.99999 - Tool Steels
18. Wo00001- W99999 --— Welding Filler Metals and Electrodes
Codes and Standards 7PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
15_AWS STANDARDS
‘The American Welding Society (AWS) standards provide information on welding
fundamentals; weld design, welders’ training qualification, testing and inspection of
welds and guidance on the application and use of welds. Individual electrode
manufacturers have given their own brand names for the various electrodes and are sold
under these names.
1.6 _AWWA STANDARDS
The American Water Works Association (AWWA) standards refer to the piping
elements required for low-pressure water services, These are less stringent than other
standards. Valves, flanges, etc. required for large diameter water pipelines are covered
under this standard and are referred rarely by CPI Piping Engineers.
1) C500 = Gate Valves for water & sewage system
2) C-510 - Cast Iron Sluice Gates
3) C-504 = Rubber Seated Butterfly Valves
4) C507 = alll valves 6” — 48”
5) C508 = Swing Check Valves 2” 24”
6) C-509 = —_Resilient Seated Gate Valves for water & sewage
1.7_MSS-SP STANDARDS
In addition to the above standards and material codes, there are standard practices
followed by manufacturers. These are published as advisory standards and are widely
followed. A large number of MSS Practices have been approved by the ANSI & ANSI
Standards published by others. In order to maintain a single source of authoritative
information, the MSS withdraws those Standard Practices in such cases. The most
common MSS-SP standards referred for piping are:
1) MSS-SP-6 : Standard Finishes for Contact Surface for Flanges
2) MSS-SP-25 - Standard Marking System for Valves, Fittings
Flanges
3) MSS-SP-42 - Class 150 Corrosion Resistant Gate, Globe and
Check Vaives.
4) MSS-SP-43 - Wrought Stainless Steel Buttweld Fittings
5) MSS-SP-44 - Steel Pipeline Flanges
Codes and Standards 8PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
6) MSS-SP-56 - Pipe Hanger Supports: Materials, Design and
Manufacture
7) MSS-SP-61 + Pressure testing of Steel Valves
8) MSS-SP-67 - Butterfly Valves
9) MSS-SP-68 - High Pressure Offseat Design Butterfly Valves
10) MSS-SP-69 - Pipe Hangers and Supports: Selection and
application
11) MSS-SP-70 + Cast Iron Gate Valves
12) MSS-SP-71 - Cast Iron Check Valves
13) MSS-SP-72 - Ball Valves
14) MSS-SP-78 - Cast Iron Plug Valves
15) MSS-SP-80 + Bronze Gate, Globe and Check Valves
16) MSS-SP-81 + Stainless Steel Bonnetless Knife Gate Valves
17) MSS-SP-83 = Pipe Unions
18) MSS-SP-85 - Cast Iron Globe Valves
19) MSS-SP-88 - Diaphragm Type Valves
20) MSS-SP-89 - Pipe Hangers and Supports: Fabrication and
installation practices.
21) MSS-SP-90 - Pipe Hangers and Supports: Guidelines on
terminology
22) MSS-SP-92 = MSS Valve user guide
23) MSS-SP-108 - ~—_—Resilient Seated Eccentric CI Plug Valves.
24) MSS-SP-115 - _—_—_-Excess Flow Valves for Natural Gas Service.
25) MSS-SP-122
Plastic Industrial Ball Valves
Codes and StandardsPIPING ENGINEERING CELL
2.0_BRITISH STANDARDS
In many instances, it is possible to find a British Standard, which may be
substituted for American Standards. Now the Community for European Normalization is
issuing standards replacing different standards in force in the European countries.
Accordingly lot of BS and DIN standards are getting replaced by CEN standards.
There are certain British Standards referred by Indian Manufacturers for the
construction of piping elements such as valves. The most commonly referred British
standards in the Piping Industry are:
1) BS10 - Flanges
2) BS 806 - Pipes and Fittings for boilers
3) BS 916 = Black Bolts, Nuts and Screws (obsolescent)
4) BS970 - Steel for forging, bars, rods, valve steel, etc.
5) BS 1212 - Specification for float operated Valves
6) BS 1306 = Copper and Copper alloy pressure piping system
7) BS 1414 = Gate Valves for Petroleum Industry
8) BS 1560 = Steel Pipe Flanges (class designated)
9) BS 1600 - Dimensions of Steel Pipes
10) BS 1640 - Butt Welding Fittings
11) BS 1868 7 Steel Check Valves for Petroleum Industry
12) BS 1873 = Steel Globe & Check Valves for Petroleum Industry
13) BS 1965 - Butt welding pipe fittings
14) BS 2080 - Face to Face / End to End dimensions of Valves
(obsolescent)
15) BS 2598 - Glass Pipelines and Fittings
16) BS 3059 - Boiler and Super Heater tubes
17) BS 3063 - Dimensions of Gaskets for pipe flanges
(obsolescent)
Codes and Standards 10PIPING ENGINEERING CELL
18) BS 3293 - CS, Flanges 267-48” NB
19) BS 3381 - Metallic Spiral Wound Gaskets
20) BS 3600 - Dimensions of Welded and Seamless Pipes &
Tubes.
21) BS 3601 - CS, Pipes & Tubes for pressure purposes at room
temperature
22) BS 3602 - CS. Pipes & Tubes for pressure purposes at high
temperature
23) BS 3603 - CS. and Alloy steel Pipes & Tubes for pressure
purposes at low temperature.
24) BS 3604 - Alloy steel Pipes & Tubes for high temperature
25) BS 3605 = S.S. Pipes & Tubes for pressure purposes
26) BS 3799 = SWiScrewed Fittings
27) BS 3974 - Pipe hangers, Slides & Roller type Supports.
28) BS 4346 - PVC pressure Pipe — joints & Fittings
29) BS 4504 - Steel, CI & Copper alloy Flanges (PN designated).
30) BS 5150 = Cl Wedge and Double Disc Gate Valves for general
Purposes
31) BS SISI - CI Gate (parallel slide) valves for general purposes
32) BS 5152 = C1Globe & Check valves for general purposes.
33) BS 5153 - CI Check valves for general purposes.
34) BS S134 + Copper alloy Gate, Globe, Check valves
35) BS 5156 - Diaphragm valves for general purposes
36) BS 5158 - CTand CS Plug valves for general purposes
37) BS 5159 = Cland CS Ball valves for general purposes
Codes and Standards uPIPING ENGINEERING CELL
38) BS 5160 = Flanged steel Globe and Check valves for general
purposes
39) BS 5163 - Double flanged Cast Iron wedge gate valves for
water works purposes.
40) BS 5351 = Steel Ball Valves for petroleum industries
41) BS 9352 = Steel Gate, Globe, Check Valves <2” NB
42) BS 5353 - Specification for Plug Valves
43) BS 5391 - Specification for ABS Pressure Pipes
44) BS 5392 - Specification for ABS Fittings
45) BS 9433 + Specification for underground Stop Valves for
water services
46) BS 5480 - Specification for GRP Pipes and Fittings
47) BS 6364 ~ Specification for Valves for cryogenic services
48) BS 6755 - Testing of valves
3.0_INDIAN STANDARDS
Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) have so far not developed an Indian standard for
the design of Piping Systems. Hence, ANSI standards ASME B 31.1/31.3 are widely
referred for the design. ‘These standards also accept materials covered in other standards.
Unlike American Standards, Indian Standards cover dimensions and material
specifications under the same standard. There are also no groupings done based on the
series/branch of engineering as well. Some of the most commonly referred Indian
Standards by the Piping Engineers are:
1) Is-210 - Grey Iron Castings
2) Is-226 - Structural Steel (superseded by IS 2062)
3) IS-554 - Dimensions of Pipe Threads
4) 1-778 - Specification for Copper Alloy Gate, Globe and
Check Valves.
Codes and Standards R