General Design Considerations: "Storage Tanks"
General Design Considerations: "Storage Tanks"
General Design Considerations: "Storage Tanks"
Considerations
“Storage tanks”
Storage facilities are required for:
A storage tank is a container, usually for holding liquids, sometimes for compressed
gases (gas tank).
The word "tank" originally meant "artificial lake" and came from India.
Storage tanks are available in many shapes: vertical and horizontal cylindrical; open top
and closed top; flat bottom, cone bottom.
Large tanks tend to be vertical cylindrical, or to have rounded corners (transition from
vertical side wall to bottom profile, to easier withstand hydraulic hydrostatically induced
pressure of contained liquid.
horizontal cylindrical tank
vertical cylindrical tank with flat bottom
vertical cylindrical tank with conical bottom
Spherical tanks
Choice of storage tanks
Tanks for a particular fluid are chosen according to the flash-point of that substance.
Used for liquids with very high flash points, (e.g. fuel oil, water, bitumen etc.)
Cone roofs, dome roofs and umbrella roofs are usual
Disadvantages:
The floating roof tanks are developed to store volatile liquids to minimize the loss of
valuable vapors, as well as, to minimize the hazard of dangerous vapor formation
underneath a fixed roof.
1) external floating roof tanks (usually called as floating roof tanks: FR Tanks) and
Applications of FR tanks:
Medium flash point liquids such as naphtha, kerosene, diesel, crude oil etc. are stored in
these tanks.
2) IFR tanks are used for liquids with low flash-points (eg. gasoline, ethanol). These tanks are
nothing but cone roof tanks with a floating roof (steel disc) inside which travels up and down
along with the liquid level.
This floating roof traps the vapor from low flash-point fuels.
IFR tanks
HARD TOP PAN FLOATING ROOF TANK
Advantages of floating roof tanks:
Reduce fire and explosion risk due to very small vapour space.
Disadvantages:
High cost.
GRP
Thermoplastic
Polyethylene
Fiberglass
They offer lower build costs and greater chemical resistance, especially for storage of
specialty chemicals.
Tank Wall Thickness
The tank wall must withstand:
Hydrostatic pressure of the liquid
Wind loading
The minimum wall thickness required to resist the hydrostatic pressure can be calculated from
the equation:
where
Since most liquids can spill, evaporate, or seep through even the smallest opening, special
consideration must be made for their safe and secure handling.
This usually involves building a bunding, or containment dike, around the tank, so that any
leakage may be safely contained. In some cases these area is called the tank farm.
There have been numerous catastrophic failures of storage tanks. These failures may
be attributed to:
1. Poor design and construction, with a wall too thin to bear repeated loads from the
contents.
2. The tank had not been tested before use by filling with water, and was also poorly
riveted.
3. Corrosion problem, so storage tanks must be protected against corrosion (e.g cathodic
protection)
Using an inert gas blanket to prevent explosive atmospheres building up from residues
may solve this problem.
Gas waste handling