Tuesday 21 April 2015

Pressure Vessel Dish End Types


HEAD TYPES
There are different types of dished heads and cones to shapes and standards. This contains Tori spherical, 2:1, Semi-Ellipsoidal, Hemispherical, Shallow Head, Cones and Cones for Pressure Vessels, Flat, Inverted Dish and Inverted Cones.

TORI SPHERICAL

Tori spherical heads are the most common type of head used for the manufacture of pressure vessels and usually the most cheap to form.
The I.C.R is equal to the I.D of the head or less.Normally suggest allowing the I.C.R to be between 90% to 95% of the I.D of the head.

The I.K.R needs to be between 6% and 10% of the I.C.R of the head.
The S.F is normally between 10mm and 30mm depending on the diameter and thickness of the head to be formed.

2:1 SEMI-ELLIPSOIDAL

2:1 Semi-Ellipsoidal heads are deeper than a tori spherical head and therefore sturdier and able to resist greater pressures. These heads are more difficult to form possessing to the greater depth required. As a result these are more costly to form than a tori spherical head, but may allow a reduction in material thickness as the strength is greater.

The I.C.R is 0.8 of the O.D of the head.
The I.K.R is 0.154 of the O.D of the head.
The S.F is normally between 10mm and 30mm depending on the diameter and thickness of the head to be formed.

HEMISPHERICAL
Hemispherical heads allow extra pressure than any other head. However, the hemispherical head is the most expensive to form, as they consists of a number of petals or gores. The number of which depends on the size of the head and the thickness of the plate to be used. The depth of the head is half of the diameter.
Hemispherical heads are also used in architectural applications by joining two hemispheres together to form a spherical ball. Other common applications are for stainless steel cooking kettles with steam jackets.

SHALLOW HEAD
Shallow heads are the most common type of head used for the manufacture of atmospheric tanks and vessels and usually used on horizontal tanks fabricated to AS1692. These heads are not suitable for pressure vessels and not recommended for tanks or vessels with external loads. I.e. agitators, nozzles with high loads. If unsure, you should have the design checked.

I am normally suggest allowing the I.C.R to be between 1.5 to 2.0 times the I.D of the head.
This can be adjusted if you require a specific depth of head.

The I.K.R for these heads is usually 32mm, 51mm or 76mm depending on the diameter and customer requirements.
The S.F is normally between 10mm and 30mm depending on the diameter and thickness of the head to be formed.

CONE
Cones are the most common type of head used for the manufacture of atmospheric tanks and especially stainless steel tanks. However they can be used in the manufacture of pressure vessels subject to certain criteria as listed below. (Cones for pressure vessels)
Cone angles are variable and are at the discretion of the customer.

The I.K.R for most cones is usually 25mm, 32mm, 51mm, 76mm or 102mm depending on the diameter, thickness and customer requirements.

CONES FOR PRESSURE VESSELS

The maximum internal apex angle for cones to be used in the fabrication of a pressure vessel is 120 Degrees.
The I.K.R for cones to be used in the fabrication of a pressure vessels need to be a minimum of 6% of the inside diameter of the vessel.
The S.F is normally between 10mm and 30mm depending on the diameter and thickness of the head to be formed.

FLAT
A flat end with a knuckled outer edge.
Typically used as bases on vertical atmospheric tanks and lids for smaller tanks.

The I.K.R for most flat ends is usually 25mm, 32mm and 51mm depending on the diameter, thickness and customer requirements. The S.F is normally between 10mm and 30mm depending on the diameter and thickness of the head to be formed.

DISH
Dished only heads are generally used for atmospheric tanks and vessels and for bulk heads or baffles inside horizontal tanks or tankers.

Typically the I.C.R is equal to the diameter or dished to a nominated I.C.R by the client.

INVERTED DISH

Inverted Head. Generally used on tanks and vessels requiring the strength of a dish whilst minimizing the depth. Useful in the construction of tanks and silos by providing a sloping, fully draining base with radius corners. Can be used in pressure vessel applications. More expensive to form and knuckle than a regular tori spherical head.

INVERTED CONE

Generally used on tanks and silos requiring a sloping, fully draining base with radius corners. Can be used on large stainless steel milk silos in lieu of a flat sloping base to protect against oil canning and subsequent stress cracking of weld seams during the hot / cold CIP process. More expensive to form and knuckle than a regular cone.




2 comments:

  1. Nice articles and your information valuable and good articles thank for the sharing information Tori spherical Dish End

    ReplyDelete
  2. Nice articles and your information valuable and good articles thank for the sharing information Hemispherical Dish End

    ReplyDelete