Steam traps enhance energy conservation, reduce downtime

21st October 2016

By: Robyn Wilkinson

Features Reporter

  

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Valve products and services provider Heaton Valves Africa has been contracted to supply steam traps for the seventeenth air separation train that is under way at energy and chemicals company Sasol’s Secunda complex, in Mpumalanga.

Heaton Valves Africa highlights that these easily maintained traps, already extensively used by Sasol and in other applications, will significantly enhance the train’s energy use.

The project is part of an upward trend observed by the company in the uptake of steam traps by the South African petrochemicals industry generally in the past year. Heaton Valves Africa initially introduced Japanese steam specialist TLV’s range of Quicktrap steam traps to South Africa in 2000, but the company notes that there has been renewed interest in the product recently, as petrochemicals companies attempt to conserve energy and reduce maintenance downtime.

Heaton Valves Africa says that this surge in demand can be attributed to the combined effects of a depressed oil price and a weak rand exchange rate, which have negatively affected the industry’s energy costs and driven the implementation of extensive energy management programmes in the sector.

Steam is used regularly for heating or as a driving force for mechanical power in many industries, including the petrochemicals industry, says the company. “Owing to this, as much steam as possible needs to be retained in steam transport piping or in heat exchangers, as it is a valuable source of latent heat. However, heating efficiency is compromised if condensate is not efficiently removed,” Heaton Valves Africa explains.

Heaton Valves Africa describes a steam trap as a special kind of automatic valve that ensures that as much steam as possible is contained in an enclosure by filtering out condensed steam and non-condensable gases, generated during industrial processes, without letting steam escape.

TLV offers a range of steam traps for various applications, which has been developed to automatically discharge condensate. Steam traps rely on either a difference in temperature, specific gravities or pressure to function, and offer high levels of energy conservation. TLV highlights that its range allows for easy maintenance through the incorporation of interchangeable parts.

TLV’s Quicktrap range offers either a free float, thermodynamic or balanced pressure thermostatic steam trap to suit the particular application. The series also combines with a highly durable F46 connector, which can be fabricated to suit any piping configuration and installed in either horizontal or vertical orientation, making it suitable for a range of applications. “Once the connector is installed, it becomes very quick and easy to remove the trap for maintenance or replacement,” Heaton Valves Africa further notes.
Owned and operated by multinational gas and services supplier Air Liquide, the 5 000 t/d seventeenth train will supply oxygen and nitrogen to the synthetic fuels (synfuels) and chemicals manufacturing process in Secunda. Using the latest air-separation technology and economies of scale, this train will be the most energy efficient oxygen train on site, with a significantly reduced environmental impact.
Sasol will use the oxygen provided by Air Liquide to produce synfuels, and the capacity created by the new train will enable Sasol to operate the complex up to the middle of the century, which is a cornerstone of the group’s Project 2050 strategy. The new train is expected to be commissioned by December 2017.

Edited by Zandile Mavuso
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor: Features

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