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You are here: Home Mining News News 2010 May May 13 10 Featured Products Computer-controlled hydraulics lift large spherical vessels

Computer-controlled hydraulics lift large spherical vessels

by wallacep created May 11, 2010 02:00 PM

As nations improve their oil and gas infrastructure Enerpac Integrated Solutions is providing sophisticated lifting and positioning technology for many of the tricky tasks involved.

  
Computer-controlled hydraulics lift large spherical vessels

Detail of computer-controlled hydraulics lift large spherical vessels


One such project involved the massive modernisation at the General Lazaro Cardenas refinery in Minatitlan, Veracruz, Mexico, which involved construction of 11 processing plants plus oil and gas pipelines. The project’s aim was to increase the refinery’s crude oil processing capability to about 350,000 barrels per day.
The Enerpac project – using computer-controlled Synchronous Lifting Technology also employed in Australasia and the Asia-Pacific - involved erection of three large, spherical vessels intended for storage of liquefied propylene, butane, and butylene. One of the final fabrication steps required heat treating the 550-ton steel vessels in order to relieve welding-induced stresses.
However heating the 53-foot diameter spheres, each supported by 12 cylindrical legs, would have caused new stresses to the legs and their points of attachment to the spheres. It was clear that during heat treating of the spheres, the bottom ends of the legs had to be free to move in a horizontal plane so as to accommodate thermal expansion.
Placement of temporary sliding surfaces under the sphere legs required lifting each of the structures a nominal nine inches off the already-placed supporting pedestals. Metalworking subcontractor ICA-Consorcio Industrial contacted Enerpac for advice and lifting equipment. Together with distributor Equipos y Maquinaria de Monterrey, Enerpac personnel recommended a Synchronous Lifting System.
Since the vessels were empty, the lifting could be accomplished by picking up each sphere by six of its 12 legs. Lifting muscle was provided by a pair of 100-ton jacks positioned at alternate legs. The 1,200 tons of lifting capacity provided a 2:1 safety factor relative to the vessel weight. Additionally, use of locknut-type cylinders provided fail-safe operation.

Digital controls provide simplicity and enhanced safety
Each sphere-lift took only about 30 minutes, and vertical position accuracy was maintained to within 1 mm at each lifting point. The digital hydraulic control system (Synchronous Lifting) produced the combination of speed and accuracy.
Consorcio Industrial successfully lifted each vessel and then lowered it onto the temporary sliding surfaces. After the heat treating was completed, the vessels were again lifted for removal of the temporary sliding surfaces, then lowered into permanent position on concrete pedestals.
“One might think of computerised equipment as adding complexity to a task. For multi-point lifting, the opposite is often the case,” said Enerpac regional manager – Australia and New Zealand, Tony Brooks.
“Manually operating the 12 jacks used for each lift would have required intense coordination, and the possibility of human error is always a concern.
“Instead, in this project the people involved had only to watch and monitor a control display as the synchronous lifting controller both monitored the precise position of each lifting point and also automatically controlled the hydraulic supply to each pair of cylinders. In addition to speed and accuracy, the safety implications are obvious.”

For more information email: info@enerpac.com.au or neville@enerpac.co.nz

 





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