| ACTUATOR: A fluid-powered or electrically
powered device that supplies force and motion to a VALVE CLOSURE MEMBER.
AIR SET: Also SUPPLY PRESSURE REGULATOR.
A device used to reduce plant air supply to valve POSITIONERS and other
control equipment. Common reduced air supply pressures are 20 and 35 psig.
AIR-TO-CLOSE: An increase in air
pressure to the ACTUATOR is required to cause the valve to close. This
is another way of saying the valve is Fail Open or Normally Open.
AIR-TO-OPEN: An increase in air
pressure to the ACTUATOR is required to cause the valve to open. This is
another way of saying the valve is FAIL CLOSED or NORMALLY CLOSED.
ANSI: An abbreviation for the American
National Standards Institute.
ANTI-CAVITATION TRIM: A special
trim used in CONTROL VALVES to stage the pressure drop through the valve,
which will either prevent the CAVITATION from occurring or direct the bubbles
that are formed to the center of the flow stream away from the valve BODY
and TRIM. This is usually accomplished by causing the fluid to travel along
a torturous path or through successively smaller orifices or a combination
of both.
API: An abbreviation for the American
Petroleum Institute.
ASME: An abbreviation for the American
Society of Mechanical Engineers.
ASTM: An abbreviation for the American
Society for Testing and Materials.
BALANCED TRIM: A trim arrangement
that tends to equalize the pressure above and below the valve plug to minimize
the net static and dynamic fluid flow forces acting along the axis of the
stem of a GLOBE VALVE. Some regulators also use this design, particularly
in high pressure service.
BELLOWS SEAL BONNET: A BONNET which
uses a BELLOWS for sealing against leakage around the valve plug stem.
BENCH SET: The proper definition
for bench set is the INHERENT DIAPHRAGM PRESSURE RANGE, which is the high
and low values of pressure applied to the diaphragm to produce rated valve
plug travel with atmospheric pressure in the valve body. This test is often
performed on a work bench in the instrument shop prior to placing the valve
into service and is thus known as Bench Set.
BODY: The body of the valve is the
main pressure boundary. It provides the pipe connecting ends and the fluid
flow passageway. It can also support the seating surface and the valve
CLOSURE MEMBER.
BONNET: The bonnet or bonnet assembiy
is that portion of the valve pressure retaining boundary which may guide
the stem and contains the PACKING BOX and STEM SEAL. The bonnet may be
integral to the valve body or bolted or screwed. The bonnet, if it is detachable,
will generally provide the opening to the valve body cavity for removal
and replacement of the internal TRIM. The bonnet is generally the means
by which the actuator is connected to the valve body.
BOOSTER: A pneumatic relay that
is used to reduce the time lag in pneumatic circuits by reproducing pneumatic
signals with high-volume and or high-pressure output. These units may act
as volume boosters or as amplifiers. A 1:2 booster will take a 3 to 15
psig input signal and output a 6 to 30 psig signal. It has also been shown
that a booster may improve the performance of a control valve by replacing
a positioner. It can provide the same stroking speed and can isolate the
controller from the large capacitive load of the actuator.
BUBBLE TIGHT: A commonly used term
to describe the ability of a control valve or regulator to shut off completely
against any pressure on any fluid. Unfortunately, it is completely unrealistic.
Control valves are tested to ANSI B16.104 and FCI 70-2-1976 which is the
American National Standard for Control Valve Seat Leakage. This standard
uses 6 different classifications to describe the valves seat leakage capabilities.
The most stringent of these is Class VI which allows a number of bubbles
per minute leakage, depending on the port size of the valve. The correct
response to the question "Will that valve go "Bubble Tight"? is to say
this valve is tested to meet Class VI shutoff requirements.
BUTTERFLY VALVE: A valve with a
circular body and a rotary motion disk closure member which is pivotally
supported by its stem. Butterfly valves come in various styles including
eccentric and high-performance valves. Butterfly valves are HIGH RECOVERY
valves and thus tend to induce CAVITATION in liquid services at much lower
pressure drops and fluid temperatures than the globe style valve. Due to
instability problems with the older design butterfly valves, many people
will limit the travel of the valve at 60 degrees of rotation on throttling
services. This can also help keep the valve out of CAVITATION problems.
CAGE: A hollow cylindrical trim
element that is sometimes used as a guide to align the movement of a VALVE
PLUG with a SEAT RING. It may also act to retain the seat ring in the valve
body. On some types of valves, the cage may contain different shaped openings
which act to characterize the flow through the valve. The cage may also
act as a NOISE ATTENUATION or ANTI-CAVITATION device.
CAGE GUIDED VALVE: A type of GLOBE
STYLE valve trim where the valve plugs with the seat.
CAVITATION: Occurs only in liquid
service. In its simplest terms cavitation is the two-stage process of vaporization
and condensation of a liquid. Vaporization is simply the boiling of a liquid,
which is also known as FLASHING. In a control valve this vaporization takes
place because the pressure of the liquid is lowered, instead of the more
common occurrence where the temperature is raised. As fluid passes through
a valve just downstream of the orifice area, there is an increase in velocity
or kinetic energy that is accompanied by a substantial decrease in pressure
or potential energy. This occurs in an area called the VENA CONTRACTA.
If the pressure in this area falls below that of the vapor pressure of
the flowing fluid, vaporization (boiling) occurs. Vapor bubbles then continue
downstream where the velocity of the fluid begins to slow and the pressure
in the fluid recovers. The vapor bubbles then collapse or implode. Cavitation
can cause a Choked Flow condition to occur and can cause mechanical damage
to valves and piping.
CHOKED FLOW: Also known as CRITICAL
FLOW. This condition exists when at a fixed upstream pressure the flow
cannot be further increased by lowering the downstream pressure. This condition
can occur in gas, steam, or liquid services. Fluids flow through a valve
because of a difference in pressure between the inlet (Pl) and outlet (P2)
of the valve. This pressure difference (Delta-P) or pressure drop isessential
to moving the fluid. Flow is proportional to the square root of the pressure
drop. Which means that the higher the pressure drop is the more fluid can
be moved through the valve. If the inlet pressure to a valve remains constant,
then the differential pressure can only be increased by lowering the outlet
pressure. For gases and steam, which are compressible fluids, the maximum
velocity of the fluid through the valve is limited by the velocity of the
propagation of a pressure wave which travels at the speed of sound in the
fluid. If the pressure drop is sufficiently high, the velocity in the flow
stream at the VENA CONTRACTA will reach the velocity of sound. Further
decrease in the outlet pressure will not be felt upstream because the pressure
wave can only travel at sonic velocity and the signal will never translate
upstream. Choked Flow can also occur in liquids but only if the fluid is
in a FLASHING or CAVITATING condition. The vapor bubbles block or choke
the flow and prevent the valve from passing more flow by lowering the outlet
pressure to increase the pres-sure drop. A good Rule Of Thumb on Gases
and Steam service is that if the pressure drop across the valve equals
or exceeds one half the absolute inlet pressure, then there is a good chance
for a choked flow condition.
Example:
P1 100 psig
P2 25 psig
_________
Delta P = 75
P1 (ABS) = 100 + 14.7 or 114.7 1/2 of 114.7 = 57.35
Actual pressure drop = 75
Choked Flow is probable.
The style of valve (that is whether it is a HIGH RECOVERY or a LOW RECOVERY
style) will also have an effect on the point at which a choked flow condition
will occur.
CLOSURE MEMBER: The movable part
of the valve which is positioned in the flow path to modify the rate of
flow through the valve. Some of the different types of closure members
are the Ball, Disk, Gate, and Plug.
COEFFICIENT FLOW: A constant (Cv)
that is used to predict the flow rate through a valve. It is related to
the geometry of the valve at a given valve opening. See Cv.
CONTROL VALVE: Also known as the
FINAL CONTROL ELEMENT. A power-operated device used to modify the fluid
flow rate in a process control system. It usually consists of a BODY or
VALVE and an ACTUATOR, which responds to a signal from the controlling
system and changes the position of a FLOW CONTROLLING ELEMENT in the valve.
CONTROL VALVE GAIN: The relationship
between valve travel and the flow rate through the valve. It is described
by means of a curve on a graph expressed as an INSTALLED OR INHERENT CHARACTERISTIC.
CONTROLLER: A device which tells
a CONTROL VALVE what to do. Controllers can be either pneumatic or electronic.
There are pressure, temperature, ph, level, differential, and flow controllers.
The job of the controller is to sense one of the above variables and compare
it to a set point that has been established. The controller then outputs
a signal either pneumatic or electronic to the control valve, which then
responds so as to bring the process variable to the desired set point.
CRITICAL FLOW: See the definition
for CHOKED FLOW.
CV: The VALVE FLOW COEFFICIENT
is the number of U.S. gallons per minute of 60 degree F water that will
flow through a valve at a specified opening with a pressure drop of 1 psi
across the valve.
DELTA-P: Differential Pressure.
The inlet pressure (Pl) minus the outlet pressure (P2).
Example:
P1 = 100 psig
P2 = 25 psig.
___________
Delta-P = 75
DIAPHRAGM: A flexible pressure-responsive
element that transmits force to the diaphragm plate and actuator stem.
DIAPHRAGM ACTUATOR: Is a fluid (usually
pneumatic) pressure-operated, spring-opposed diaphragm assembly which positions
the valve stem in response to an input signal.
DIAPHRAGM PRESSURE: See Bench Set.
DIAPHRAGM VALVE: A valve with a
flexible linear motion CLOSURE MEMBER that is forced into the internal
flow passageway of the BODY by the ACTUATOR. Pinch or Clamp valves and
Weir-type valves fall into this category.
DIRECT ACTING: This term has several
different meanings depending upon the device it is describing. A DIRECT-ACTING
ACTUATOR is one in which the actuator stem extends with an increase in
diaphragm pressure. A DIRECT-ACTING VALVE is one with a PUSH-DOWN-TO-C
LOSE plug and seat orientation. A DIRECT-ACTING POSITIONER or a DIRECT-ACTING
CONTROLLER outputs an increase in signal in response to an increase in
set point.
DIRECT ACTUATOR: Is one in which
the actuator stem extends with an increase in diaphragm pressure.
DUAL SEATING: A valve is said to
have dual seating when it uses a resilient or composition material such
as TFE, Kel-F, or Buna-N, etc. for its primary seal and a metal-to-metal
seat as a secondary seal. The idea is that the primary seal will provide
tight shut-off Class VI and if it is damaged the secondary seal will backup
the primary seal with Class IV shut-off.
DYNAMIC UNBALANCE: The total force
produced on the valve plug in any stated open position by the fluid pressure
acting upon it. The particular style of valve, i.e. single-ported, double-ported,
flow-to-open, flow-to-close, has an effect on the amount of dynamic unbalance.
EFFECTIVE AREA: For a DIAPHRAGM
ACTUATOR, the effective area is that part of the diaphragm area that is
effective in producing a stem force. Usually the effective area will change
as the valve is stroked - being at a maximum at the start and at a minimum
at the end of the travel range. Flat sheet diaphragms are most affected
by this; while molded diaphragms will improve the actuator performance,
and a rolling diaphragm will provide a constant stem force throughout the
entire stroke of the valve.
ELECTRIC ACTUATOR: Also known as
an Electro-Mechanical Actuator uses an electrically operated motor-driven
gear train or screw to position the actuator stem. The actuator may respond
to either a digital or analog electrical signal.
END CONNECTION: The configuration
provided to make a pressure-tight joint to the pipe carrying the fluid
to be controlled. The most common of these connections are threaded, flanged,
or welded.
EQUAL PERCENTAGE: A term used to
describe a type of valve flow characteristic where for equal increments
of valve plug travel the change in flow rate with respect to travel may
be expressed as a constant percent of the flow rate at the time of the
change. The change in flow rate observed with respect to travel will be
relatively small when the valve plug is near its seat and relatively high
when the valve plug is nearly wide open.
EXTENSION BONNET: A bonnet with
a packing box that is extended above the body to bonnet connection so as
to maintain the temperature of the packing above (cryogenic service) or
below (high-temp service) the temperature of the process fluid. The length
of the extension depends on the amount of temperature differential that
exists between the process fluid and the packing design temperature.
FACE-TO-FACE: Is the distance between
the face of the inlet opening and the face of the outlet opening of a valve
or fitting. These dimensions are governed by ANSI/ISA specifications.
The following Uniform Face-to Face Dimensions apply.
SPECIFICATION VALVE TYPE
ANSI/ISA S75.03 INTEGRAL FLANGED GLOBE STYLE CONTROL VALVES
ANSI/ISA S75.04 FLANGELESS CONTROL VALVES ANSUISA S75.20 SEPARABLE
FLANGE GLOBE STYLE CONTROL VALVES
FAIL-CLOSED: Or NORMALLY CLOSED. Another
way of describing an AIR-TO-OPEN actuator. Approximately 80% of all spring
return diaphragm operators in the field are of this construction.
FAIL-IN-PLACE: A term used to describe
the ability of an actuator to stay at the same percent of travel it was
in when it lost its air supply. On SPRING RETURN ACTUATORS this is accomplished
by means of a LOCK-UP VALVE. On PISTON ACTUATORS a series of compressed
air cylinders must be employed.
FAIL-OPEN: Or NORMALLY OPEN. Another
way of describing an AIR-TO-CLOSE actuator.
FAIL-SAFE: A term used to describe
the desired failure position of a control valve. It could FAIL-CLOSED,
FAIL-OPEN, or FAIL-IN-PLACE. For a spring-return operator to fail-in-place
usually requires the use of a lock-up valve.
FEEDBACK SIGNAL: The return signal
that results from a measurement of the directly controlled variable. An
example would be where a control valve is equipped with a positioner. The
return signal is usually a mechanical indication of valve plug stem position
which is fed back into the positioner.
F1: Or PRESSURE RECOVERY
FACTOR. A number used to describe the ratio between the pressure recovery
after the VENA CONTRACTA and the pressure drop at the vena contracta. It
is a measure of the amount of pressure recovered between the vena contracta
and the valve outlet. Some manufacturers use the therm Km to
describe the pressure recovery factor. This number will be high (0.9) for
a GLOBE STYLE VALVE with a torturous follow path and lower (0.8 to 0.6)
for a ROTARY STYLE VALVE with a streamlined flow path. On most rotary products
the F1 factor will vary with the
degree of opening of the VALVE CLOSURE MEMBER. Note! F1
does not equal Km.
FLANGELESS: A valve that does not
have integral line flanges. This type of valve is sometimes referred to
as a Wafer Style valve. The valve is installed by bolting it between the
companion flanges with a set of bolts or studs called line bolting. Care
should be taken that strain-hardened bolts and nuts are used in lieu of
all-thread, which can stretch when subjected to tempera-ture cycling.
FLANGELESS BODY: See FLANGELESS
for a definition. This type of valve is very economical from a manufacturing
and stocking standpoint because a valve that is rated as a 600# ANSI valve
can also be used between 150# and 300# ANSI flanges thus eliminating the
need to manufacture three different valve bodies or stock three different
valve bodies. The down side is that valves with flangeless bodies are not
acceptable in certain applications - particularly in refinery processes.
FLASHING: Is the boiling or vaporizing
of a liquid. See the definition of CAVITATION. When the vapor pressure
downstream of a control valve is less than the upsteam vapor pressure,
part of the liquid changes to a vapor and remains as a vapor unless the
downstream pressure recovers significantly, in which case CAVITATION occurs.
Flashing will normally cause a CHOKED FLOW condition to occur. In addition
the vapor bubbles can also cause mechanical damage to the valve and piping
system.
FLOW CHARACTERISTIC: The relationship
between valve capacity and valve travel. It is usually expressed graphically
in the form of a curve. CONTROL VALVES have two types of characteristics
INHERENT and INSTALLED. The INHERENT characteristic is derived from testing
the valve with water as the fluid and a constant pressure drop across the
valve. When valves are installed into a system with pumps, pipes, and fittings,
the pressure dropped across the valve will vary with the travel. When the
actual flow in a system is plotted against valve opening, the curve is
known as the INSTALLED flow characteristic. Valves can be characterized
by shaping the plugs, orifices, or cages to produce a particular curve.
Valves are characterized in order to try to alter the valve gain.
Valve gain is the flow change divided by the control signal change.
This is done in an effort to compensate for nonlinearities in the control
loop.
FLOW COEFFICIENT: See the definition
for Cv.
GAIN: The relationship of input
to output. If the full range of the input is equal to the full range of
the output, then the gain is 1. Gain is another way to describe the sensitivity
of a device.
GLOBE VALVE: A valve with a linear
motion, push-pull stem, whose one or more ports and body are distinguished
by a globular shaped cavity around the port region. This type of valve
is characterized by a torturous flow path and is also referred to as a
LOW RECOVERY VALVE because some of the energy in the flow stream is dissipated;
and the inlet pressure will not recover to the extent that it would in
a more streamlined HIGH RECOVERY VALVE.
HANDWHEEL: A manual override device
used to stroke a valve or limit its travel. The handwheel is sometimes
referred to as a hand jack. It may be top mounted, side mounted, in-yoke
mounted or shaft mounted and declutchable.
HARD FACING: A material that is
harder than the surface to which it is applied. It is normally used to
resist fluid erosion or to reduce the chance of galling between moving
parts. Hard facing may be applied by fusion welding, diffusion, or spray
coating the material. Alloy #6 or Stellite is a common material used for
this purpose.
HARDNESS: A property of metals that
is discussed frequently when speaking of various component parts used in
valve construction, particularly valve trim. There are two hardness scales
which are commonly used, Rockwell & Brinell.
HARDNESS COMPARISON
|
ROCKWELL |
BRINELL |
| 316 SST |
76B |
137 |
| 17-4 PH |
34-38C |
352 |
| Hardened Inconel |
X-750 |
|
|
38-42C |
401 |
| #6 Stellite (Alloy 6) |
40-44C |
415 |
| Chrome Plating |
59-67C |
725 |
Note that 316 SST is on the Rockwell B scale which means it is a much softer
material than the others shown.
HIGH RECOVERY VALVE: A valve design
that dissipates relatively little flow stream energy due to streamlined
internal contours and minimal flow turbulence. Therefore, pressure down
stream of the valve VENA CONTRACTA recovers to a high percentage of its
inlet value. These types of valves are identifiable by their straight-th
rough flow paths. Examples are most rotary control valves, such as the
eccentric plug, butterfly, and ball valve.
HYSTERESIS: The difference between
up-scale and down-scale results in instrument response when subjected to
the same input approached from the opposite direction. Example: A control
valve has a stroke of 1.0 inch and we give the valve a 9 psig signal. The
valve travels 0.500 of an inch. We then give the valve a 12 psig signal,
and the valve travels to 0.750 of an inch. When the valve is then given
a 9 psig signal, the stroke is measured at 0.501. That represents hysteresis.
Hysteresis can be caused by a multitude of variables, packing friction,
loose linkage, pressure drop, etc. If someone asks you what the hysteresis
of your control valve is, it is a bum question because hysteresis is more
aptly applied to an instrument than to a control valve. There are simply
too many variables in the valve and the system to answer the question properly.
The control valve only responds to the controller signal and will move
to a position to satisfy the controller - thus negating the effects of
hysteresis.
INCIPIENT CAVITATION: Is a term
used to describe the early stages of CAVITATION. At this point the bubbles
are small, and the noise is more of a hiss, like the sound of frying bacon.
There is normally no mechanical damage associated with incipient cavitation
although it could have an effect on the corrosive properties of some fluids.
INHERENT DIAPHRAGM PRESSURE: The
high and low values of pressure applied to the diaphragm to produce rated
valve plug travel with atmospheric pressure in the valve body. This is
more commonly referred to as BENCH SET.
INHERENT FLOW CHARACTERISTIC: It
is the relationship between valve capacity and valve travel and is usually
expressed graphically. It is derived from testing a valve with water as
the fluid and with a constant pressure drop across the valve. The most
common types of inherent flow characteristics are LINEAR, EQUAL PERCENTAGE,
MODIFIED PARABOLIC, and QUICK OPENING.
INSTALLED DIAPHRAGM PRESSURE: The
high and low values of pressure applied to the diaphragm to produce rated
travel with stated conditions in the valve body. The "stated conditions"
referred to here mean the actual pressure drops at operating conditions.
Example: A control valve may have an INHERENT DIAPHRAGM PRESSURE or BENCH
SET of 8 to 15 psig. But when subjected to a 600 psig. inlet pressure,
it may start to open at 3 psig. and be full open at 15 psig. It is because
of the forces acting on the valve plug and the direction of flow through
the valve (FLOW-TO-OPEN or FLOW-TO-CLOSE) that the installed diaphragm
pressure will differ from the inherent diaphragm pressure.
INSTALLED FLOW CHARACTERISTIC: The
flow characteristic when the pressure drop across the valve varies with
flow and related conditions in the system in which the valve is installed.
The purpose of characterizing a control valve is to help compensate for
nonlinearities in the control loop.
INSTRUMENT PRESSURE: The output
pressure from an automatic controller that is used to operate a control
valve. It is the input signal to the valve.
INTEGRAL SEAT: The flow control
orifice and seat that is an integral part of the valve body or cage. The
seat is machined directly out of the valve body and is normally not replaceable
without replacing the body itself - although some can be repaired by welding
and remachining.
INTEGRAL FLANGE: A valve body whose
flange connection is an integral or cast part of the body. Valves with
integral flanges were traditionally known to have the ANSI short FACE-TO-FACE
dimension ANSI/ISA S75.03. However many manufacturers now produce valve
bodies with both integral and SEPARABLE FLANGES that will meet both the
ANSI short and long face-to-face dimensions.
I/P: An abbreviation for current-to-pneumatic
signal conversion. This term is commonly used to describe a type of transducer
that converts an electric (4-20 m.a) input signal to a pneumatic (3-15
psig.) output signal.
LANTERN RING: A rigid spacer used
in the packing with packing above and below it. The lantern ring is used
to allow lubrication to the packing or allow access to a leak off connection.
On some of the new fugitive emission packing systems, it also acts as a
stem guide.
LAPPED-IN: A term that describes
a procedure for reducing the leakage rate on metal-to-metal seated valves
and regulators. The plug and seat are lapped together with the aid of an
abrasive compound in an effort to establish a better seating surface than
would normally be achieved by means of machining.
LEAKAGE CLASSIFICATION: A term used
to describe certain standardized testing procedures for CONTROL VALVES
with a FLOW COEFFICIENT greater then 0. 1 (Cv). These procedures
are outlined in ANSI Standard d B16.104-1976, which gives specific tests
and tolerances for six seat leakage classifications. It should be remembered
that these tests are used to establish uniform acceptance standards for
manufacturing quality and are not meant to be used to estimate leakage
under actual working conditions. Nor should anyone expect these leakage
rates to be maintained after a valve is placed in service. There is no
standard test for SELF-CONTAINED REGULATORS at this time. Note!
You will see many instances where regulators are specified using the above
criteria.
LEAK-OFF: A term used to describe
a threaded connection located on the BONNET of a valve that allows for
the detection of leakage of the process fluid past the packing area.
LINEAR FLOW CHARACTERISTIC: A characteristic
where flow capacity or (Cv) increases linearly with valve travel.
Flow is directly proportional to valve travel. This is the preferred valve
characteristic for a control valve that is being used with a distributive
control system (DCS) or programmable logic controller (PLC).
LINEAR VALVE: Another name for a
GLOBE VALVE. It refers to the linear or straight-line movement of the plug
and stem.
LIQUID PRESSURE RECOVERY:
See (F1).
LOADING PRESSURE: The pressure used
to position a pneumatic actuator. It is the pressure that is actually applied
to the actuator diaphragm or piston. It can be the INSTRUMENT PRESSURE
if a valve positioner is not used or is bypassed.
LOCK-UP VALVE: A special type of
regulator that is installed between the valve POSITIONER and the valve
ACTUATOR, where it senses the supply air pressure. If that pressure falls
below a certain level, it locks or traps the air loaded into the actuator
causing the valve to FAIL-IN-PLACE.
LOW RECOVERY VALVE: A valve design
that dissipates a considerable amount of flow stream energy due to turbulence
created by the contours of the flow path. Consequently, pressure downstream
of the valve VENA CONTRACTA recovers to a lesser percentage of its inlet
value than a valve with a more streamlined flow path. The conventional
GLOBE STYLE control valve is in this category.
MODIFIED PARABOLIC: A FLOW CHARACTERISTIC
that lies somewhere between LINEAR and EQUAL PERCENTAGE. It provides fine
throttling at low flow capacity and an approximately linear characteristic
at higher flow capacities.
NORMALLY CLOSED: See AIR-TO-OPEN.
NORMALLY OPEN: See AIR-TO-CLOSE.
P1: Is used to designate Inlet Pressure.
P2: Is used to designate Outlet
Pressure.
PACKING: A sealing system that normally
consists of a deformable material such as TFE, graphite, asbestos, etc.
It is usually in the form of solid or split rings contained in a PACKING
BOX that are compressed so as to provide an effective pressure seal.
PACKING BOX: The chamber located
in the BONNET which surrounds the stem and contains the PACKING and other
stem-sealing components.
PACKING FOLLOWER: A part that transfers
a mechanical load to the PACKING from the packing flange or nut.
PISTON ACTUATOR: A fluid-powered,
normally pneumatic device in which the fluid acts upon a movable cylindrical
member, the piston, to provide linear motion to the actuator stem. These
units are spring or air opposed and operate at higher supply pressures
than a SPRING RETURN ACTUATOR.
PLUG: See CLOSURE MEMBER.
PORT-GUIDED: A valve plug that fits
inside the seat ring, which acts as a guide bushing. Examples: Splined
Plug, Hollow Skirt, and the Feather-Guide Plug.
POSITION SWITCH: A switch that is
linked to the valve stem to detect a single, preset valve stem position.
Example: Full open or full closed. The switch may be pneumatic, hydraulic,
or electric.
POSITION TRANSMITTER: A device that
is mechanically connected to the valve stem and will generate and transmit
either a pneumatic or electric signal that represents the valve stem position.
POSITIONER: A device used to position
a valve with regard to a signal. The positioner compares the input signal
with a mechanical feed back link from the actuator. It then produces the
force necessary to move the actuator output until the mechanical output
position feedback corresponds with the pneumatic signal value. Positioners
can also be used to modify the action of the valve (reverse acting positioner),
alter the stroke or controller input signal (split range positioner), increase
the pressure to the valve actuator (amplifying positioner), or alter the
control valve FLOW CHARACTERISTIC (characterized positioner).
POST GUIDE: A guiding system where
the valve stem is larger in the area that comes into contact with the guide
busings than in the adjacent stem area.
PUSH-DOWN-TO-C LOSE: A term used
to describe a LINEAR or GLOBE STYLE valve that uses a DIRECT ACTING plug
and stem arrangement. The plug is located above the seat ring. When the
plug is pushed down, the plug contacts the seat, and the valve closes.
Note! Most control valves are of this type.
PUSH-DOWN-TO-OPEN: A term used to
describe a LINEAR or GLOBE STYLE valve that uses a REVERSE ACTION plug
and stem arrangement. The plug is located below the seat ring. When the
plug is pushed down, the plug moves away from the seat, and the valve opens.
PRESSURE RECOVERY FACTOR: See (F1).
QUICK OPENING: A FLOW CHARACTERISTIC
that provides maximum change in flow rate at low travels. The curve is
basically linear through the first 40% of travel. It then flattens out
indicating little increase in flow rate as travel approaches the wide open
position. This decrease occurs when the valve plug travel equals the flow
area of the port. This normally happens when the valve characteristics
is used for on/off control.
RANGEABILITY: The range over which
a control valve can control. It is the ratio of the maximum to minimum
controllable FLOW COEFFICIENTS. This is also called TURNDOWN although technically
it is not the same thing. There are two types of rangeability - inherent
and installed. Inherent rangeability is a property of the valve alone and
may be defined as the range of flow coefficients between which the gain
of the valve does not deviate from a specified gain by some stated tolerance
limit. Installed rangeability is the range within which the deviation from
a desired INSTALLED FLOW CHARACTERISTIC does not exceed some stated tolerance
limit.
REDUCED TRIM: Is an undersized orifice.
Reduced or restricted capacity trim is used for several reasons. (1) It
adapts a valve large enough to handle increased future flow requirement
with trim capacity properly sized for present needs. (2) A valve with adequate
structural strength can be selected and still retain reasonable travel
vs. capacity relationships. (3) A valve with a large body using restricted
trim can be used to reduce inlet and outlet fluid velocities. (4) It can
eliminate the need for pipe reducers. (5) Errors in over sizing can be
corrected by use of restricted capacity trim.
REVERSE ACTING: This term has several
deferent meanings depending upon the device it is describing. A REVERSE-ACTING
ACTUATOR is one in which the actuator stem retracts with an increase in
diaphragm pressure. A REVERSE-ACTING VALVE is one with a PUSH-DOWN-TO-OPEN
plug and seat orientation. A REVERSE-ACTING POSITIONER or a REVERSE-ACTING
CONTROLLER outputs a decrease in signal in response to an increase in set
point.
REVERSE FLOW: Flow of fluid in the
opposite direction from that normally considered the standard direction.
Some ROTARY VALVES are considered to be bi-directional although working
pressure drop capabilities may be lower and leakage rates may be higher
in reverse flow.
ROTARY VALVE: A valve style in which
the FLOW CLOSURE MEMBER is rotated in the flow stream to modify the amount
of fluid passing through the valve.
SEAT LOAD: The contact force between
the seat and the valve plug. When an actuator is selected for a given control
valve, it must be able to generate enough force to overcome static, stem,
and dynamic unbalance with an allowance made for seat load.
SEAT RING: A part of the flow passageway
that is used in conjuction with the CLOSURE MEMBER to modify the rate of
flow through the valve.
SELF-CONTAINED REGULATOR: A valve
with a positioning actuator using a self-generated power signal for moving
the closure member relative to the valve port or ports in response and
in proportion to the changes in energy of the controlled variable. The
force necessary to position the CLOSURE MEMBER is derived from the fluid
flowing through the valve.
SEPARABLE FLANGE: Also known as
a SLIP-ON FLANGE. A flange that fits over a valve body flow connection.
It is generally held in place by means of a retaining ring. This style
of flange connection conforms to ANSI/ISA 275.20 and allows for the use
of different body and flange materials. Example: A valve with a stainless
steel construction could use carbon steel flanges. This type of valve is
very popular in the chemical and petro-chemical plants because it allows
the use of exotic body materials and low cost flanges.
SOFT SEATED: A term used to describe
valve trim with an elastomeric or plastic material used either in the VALVE
PLUG or SEAT RING to provide tight shutoff with a minimal amount of actuator
force. A soft seated valve will usually provide CLASS VI seat leakage capability.
SPLIT BODY: A valve whose body is
split. This design allows for easy plug and seat removal. Split-bodied
valves are made in both the straight-through and angle versions. The Masoneilan
2600 or ANNIN is an example of a split body valve.
SPRING RATE: A term usually applied
to SELF-CONTAINED REGULATORS describing the range of set point adjustment
available for a particular range spring.
STATIC UNBALANCE: The net force
produced on the valve stem by the fluid pressure acting on the CLOSURE
MEMBER and STEM within the pressure retaining boundary. The closure member
is at a stated opening with a stated flow condition. This is one of the
forces an actuator must overcome.
STELLITE: Also called #6 Stellite
or Alloy 6. A material used in valve trim known for its hardness, wear
and corrosion resistance. Stellite is available as a casting, barstock
material and may be applied to a softer material such as 316 stainless
steel by means of spray coating or welding.
STEM: The VALVE PLUG STEM is a rod
extending through the bonnet assembly to permit positioning of the plug
or CLOSURE MEMBER. The ACTUATOR STEM is a rod or shaft which connects to
the valve stem and transmits motion or force from the actuator to the valve.
STEM GUIDE: A guide bushing closely
fitted to the valve stem and aligned with the seat. Good stem guiding is
essential to minimizing packing leakage.
SUPPLY PRESSURE: The pressure at
the supply port of a device such as a controller, positioner, or transducer.
Common values of control valve supply pressures are 20 psig. for a 3-15
psig. output and 35 psig. for a 6-30 psig. output.
STROKE: See TRAVEL.
THROTTLING: Modulating control as
opposed to ON/OFF control.
TRANSDUCER: An element or device
which receives information in the form of one quantity and coverts it to
information in the form of the same or another quantity. (See I/P)
TRAVEL: The distance the plug or
stem moves in order to go from a full-closed to a full-open position. Also
called STROKE.
TRIM: Includes all the parts that
are in flowing contact with the process fluid except the body, BONNET,
and body flanges and gaskets. The plug, seats, stem, guides, bushings,
and cage are some of the parts included in the term trim.
TRUNNION MOUNTING: A style of mounting
the disc or ball on the valve shaft or stub shaft with two bushings diametrically
opposed.
TURNDOWN: A term used to describe
the ratio between the minimum and maximum flow conditions seen in a particular
system. Example: If the minimum flow were 10 G.P.M. and the maximum flow
were 100 G.P.M. the turndown would be 10:1. This term is sometimes incorrectly
applied to valves. See RANGEABILITY.
VALVE: A device which dispenses,
dissipates, or distributes energy in a system.
VALVE BODY: See BODY.
VALVE FLOW COEFFICIENT: See Cv.
VALVE PLUG: See CLOSURE MEMBER.
VENA CONTRACTA: The location where
cross-sectional area of the flow stream is at its minimum size, where fluid
velocity is at its highest level, and where fluid pressure is at its lowest
level. The vena contracta normally occurs just downstream of the actual
physical restriction in a control valve. |