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How to Choose the Right Industrial Valves from Different Type Valves

In fluid piping systems, Industrial valves are crucial for controlling equipment and pipeline isolation, regulating flow, preventing backflow, and managing pressure relief. Designed to handle diverse media including air, water, steam, corrosive materials, slurries, oils, liquid metals, and radioactive substances, selecting the appropriate valve requires a thorough understanding of their technical properties, selection processes, and key criteria.

I. Classification of Valves
Valves are categorized based on several key attributes:
  1. Operation Mode
    • Automatic Valves: Operate autonomously using the energy of the working medium (e.g., check valves, safety relief valves, pressure regulators, steam traps).
    • Actuated Valves: Operated manually or via external power sources (electric/hydraulic/pneumatic actuators). Examples include gate, globe, ball, butterfly, and plug valves.
      • Subclasses by closure movement:
        • Gate-type (linear motion along seat center line)
        • Plunger/Sphere-type (rotating around central axis)
        • Rotary-form (external shaft rotation)
        • Disc-type (internal axis rotation)
        • Sliding-type (perpendicular channel movement)
  2. Functional Purpose
Cut-offStop valves, gate valvesConnect/disconnect pipeline sections
CheckSwing checksPrevent reverse flow
RegulationControl valves, PRVsModulate pressure/flow
DiversionThree-way manifoldsChange flow direction
Safety reliefSafety valvesRelease excess pressure for system protection
SpecialtySteam traps, ventsNiche applications (draining condensate)
  1. Actuation Method
    • Manual (handwheel/lever + worm gears for high torque needs)
    • Electric motor drive
    • Hydraulic cylinder actuation
    • Compressed air pneumatics
  2. Pressure Rating
Vacuum<0.1 MPa (abs)Low-pressure steam systems
Low≤1.6 MPaGeneral water distribution
Medium2.5–6.4 MPaIndustrial processes
High10.0–80.0 MPaPower plants
Ultra-high≥100.0 MPaPetrochemical refineries
  1. Temperature Service
    • Ordinary: –40°C to 425°C (Standard process fluids)
    • High: 425°C–600°C (Heat exchangers)
    • Refractory: >600°C (Furnace gas handling)
    • Low temp: –150°C to –40°C (Refrigeration cycles)
    • Cryogenic: <–150°C (LNG transfer systems)
  2. Size Range
    • Small: DN <40mm (Instrumentation branches)
    • Medium: DN50–300mm (Main plant lines)
    • Large: DN350–1200mm (Primary infrastructure)
    • Extra large: DN≥1400mm (River crossing projects)
  3. End Connections
    • Flanged bolted joints (ASME B16.5 compliant)
    • Screwed threaded ends (Socket weld alternatives)
    • Butt welding necks (Sanitary food grade options)
    • Wafer/clamped designs (Quick maintenance access)

II. Valve Performance Traits
Every valve exhibits two fundamental profiles affecting suitability:
  1. Operational Traits defining functional capabilities:
    • Type (isolation vs modulating vs safety)
    • Body material compatibility (CS, SS316, Alloy 20 etc.)
    • Actuator interface standards (ISO mountings)
  2. Structural Traits governing installation constraints:
    • Face-to-face dimensions per ANSI B16.10
    • Sealing technologies (live-loaded packing)
    • Stem designs (non-rising vs rising stem variants)

III. Systematic Valve Selection Process
Follow this structured approach for optimal results:
  1. Define Service Conditions
    • Process purpose (on/off vs throttling)
    • Fluid properties (corrosivity index, viscosity profile)
    • T/P parameters at design point & extremes
  2. Match Line Standards
    • Nominal bore alignment with pipe ID schedules
    • Flange drilling compatibility (raised face vs ring joint)
  3. Select Actuation Protocol
    • Manual override requirements? (Failsafe positioners)
    • Control signal types (4–20 mA analog input)
  4. Choose Material Construction
    • Consider galvanic corrosion risks between wetted parts
    • Select seat materials resistant to wire drawing effects
  5. Determine Body Style Based on flow dynamics:
    • Straightway designs minimize turbulence losses ✓Full port ball valves ideal here
    • Directional changes require angle patterns ✓Three-way diverters preferred
  6. Set Performance Targets For automated units:
    • Max allowable differential pressure drop (ΔPmax)
    • Leakage class certification (API Class VI required?)
  7. Reference Manufacturer Data To validate choices against:
    • Cv flow coefficient curves (Liquid vs gas correction factors applied)
    • Torque requirement charts (Cold start vs hot operation margins checked)
    • Cavitation damage prevention guides (Trim modifications needed?)

IV. Key Application Guidelines
Specific recommendations by service type:
Gate Valves
Full port isolation; high temp steam; viscous fluids like heavy oilsFrequent throttling – causes disc erosionAdd flush ports for solid-handled models
Globe Valves
Precision regulation in non-abrasive service; tight shutoffSlurries – deposit buildup jams trim componentsUse extended bonnets for cryogenic duties
Ball Valves
Fast cycling; bidirectional sealing; multiphase transportSubmicron biotech fluid paths – trapped volume riskTrunnion mounted for large diameter sizes
Butterflies
Large line sizes where space constrained; low pressure drop acceptanceVapor service – disc lap causes vapor lockingDouble offset design improves sealing
Check Valves
Gravity feed prevention; pump protectionHigh viscosity – slow closing leads hammer blowTilting disc reduces slam potential
Diaphragms
Corrosive chemical dosing; sanitary food washing cyclesSuspended solids – diaphragm puncture hazardPTFE lining offers broad chemical resistance

V. Crucial Considerations During Final Placement
  1. Flow Regime Impact: Turbulent vs laminar regime affects pressure recovery characteristics. Choose contoured bodies for high Reynolds numbers.
  2. Noise Abatement: Install downstream of restrictive orifices to suppress aerodynamic noise generation. Consider sound suppression trim options.
  3. Vibration Damping: Position away from mechanical equipment excitation sources whenever possible. Use flexible connectors if proximity unavoidable.
  4. Maintainability Access: Ensure adequate clearance around actuators per API 6D guidelines. Allow minimum clearance per ASME B31.1 for maintenance roads.
  5. Human Engineering: Locate handwheels within easy reach of operators while standing upright. Avoid overhead placement requiring ladders for routine operation.

By following these steps and checking manufacturer performance curves against real operating conditions, engineers can choose valves that are safe, reliable, and efficient for any fluid handling system. Even small mismatches between valve features and system needs may cause failures like seat wear, stem sticking, or actuator overload. Always test critical service valves in the factory under worst-case conditions before final installation.
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