SEALED AND THERMALLY INSULATING TANK COMPRISING ANTI-CONVECTIVE FILLING ELEMENTS
20230184383 · 2023-06-15
Inventors
- Bruno Deletre (Saint Remy les Chevreuse, FR)
- Marguerite D'OLCE (Saint Remy Les Chevreuse, FR)
- Olivier Perrot (Saint Remy les Chevreuse, FR)
Cpc classification
F17C2223/033
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2203/066
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C3/027
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2270/0107
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2201/0157
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2203/0329
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C3/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2201/052
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2205/0355
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2250/0439
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2223/0161
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2203/0621
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2227/0135
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2221/035
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2203/0358
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2221/033
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2260/033
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F17C3/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C3/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The invention relates to a tank (71) for storing a liquefied gas, wherein the tank (71) includes peripheral walls (1), the peripheral walls (1) including a sealing membrane and at least one thermal insulation barrier,
wherein the sealing membrane includes corrugated metal plates comprising a first series of parallel corrugations, extending along a direction x and a second series of parallel corrugations extending along a direction y, the direction x being a direction of greater slope, wherein the peripheral walls (1) comprise filling elements with pressure loss, which are disposed in the corrugations of the first series of corrugations so as to form a belt (16) of filling elements extending all round the tank (71), the belt being formed of at least one obstruction part (17) and of at least one discontinuation part (18), the belt including at most one discontinuation part (18) per peripheral wall (1).
Claims
1. A sealed and thermally insulating tank (71) for storing a liquefied gas, wherein the tank (71) includes a bottom wall (12), a ceiling wall (13) and peripheral walls (1) connecting the bottom wall (12) to the ceiling wall (13) so as to form a polyhedral tank (71), the peripheral walls (1) including a sealing membrane (4) intended to be in contact with the liquefied gas contained in the tank (71) and at least one thermal insulation barrier (3) arranged between the sealing membrane (4) and a supporting wall of a supporting structure (2), the thermal insulation barrier including a plurality of juxtaposed insulating panels (5), wherein the sealing membrane (4) includes corrugated metal plates (9) juxtaposed to each other and comprising a first series of parallel corrugations (10), extending along a direction x and a second series of parallel corrugations (11) extending along a direction y, the direction x being a direction of greater slope of the peripheral wall (1), the corrugations protruding towards the inside of the tank (71) and forming channels (14) for circulating a gas present in the thermally insulating barrier (3), wherein the peripheral walls (1) comprise filling elements (15) with pressure loss, which are disposed in the corrugations of the first series of corrugations (10) so as to obstruct the circulation channel (14) of said corrugations, so as to form a belt (16) of filling elements embodied in a plane parallel to the bottom wall (12) and extending all round the tank (71), the belt (16) of filling elements being formed of at least one obstruction part (17) where each corrugation of the first series of corrugations (10) is obstructed by one of the filling elements (15), and of at least one discontinuation part (18) configured to allow the gas present in the circulation channels (14) to circulate through the belt (16) of filling elements, said or each obstruction part (17) being delimited by said or two discontinuation parts (18), the belt (16) of filling elements including at most one discontinuation part (18) per peripheral wall (1), and the filling elements (15) being configured to generate a pressure loss reducing a gaseous flow passing through said circulation channel (14), the filling elements (15) of a said obstruction part (17) of the at least one belt (16) of filling elements being inclusively disposed each time between two adjacent corrugations of the second series of corrugations (11).
2. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the filling elements (15) of the obstruction part (17) of the at least one belt (16) of filling elements are aligned with each other along the direction y, the direction y being perpendicular to the direction x.
3. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2, wherein the tank (71) comprises a plurality of belts (16) of filling elements spaced from each other by a pitch substantially equal to a dimension of the insulating panels (5) in the direction x.
4. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 3, wherein the at least one discontinuation part (18) is situated close to an edge of a said peripheral wall (1), the discontinuation parts (18) of two adjacent belts (16) of filling elements being disposed either side of the peripheral wall (1).
5. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 3, wherein the belts (16) of filling elements comprise a single discontinuation part (18), the discontinuation parts (18) of two adjacent belts (16) of filling elements being situated on peripheral walls (1) opposite each other.
6. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least one discontinuation part (18) is situated in one to nine corrugations of the first series of corrugations (10), said one to nine adjacent corrugations being without filling elements (15).
7. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least one discontinuation part (18) is situated in a plurality of corrugations of the first of corrugations (10), the discontinuation part (18) including a staggered grid (19) of filling elements (15), the staggered grid (19) being configured to create a fluidic communication path between the circulation channels (14) situated below the belt (16) of filling elements and the circulation channels (14) situated above the belt (16) of filling elements, said fluidic communication path including a plurality of bends.
8. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the filling elements (15) are made in closed cell polymer foam.
9. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 8, wherein the filling elements (15) are made in polystyrene or polyethylene foam.
10. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the filling elements (15) are situated above, below or at a corrugation node (20) in the direction of greater slope, the corrugation nodes (20) being formed by an intersection between a corrugation of the first series of corrugations (10) and a corrugation of the second series of corrugations (11).
11. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the filling elements (15) comprise, on an upper face (24) turned towards the corrugation to close, at least one beading (26) extending in the direction y, the at least one beading (26) being configured to be compressed during assembly so as to form a seal.
12. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the sealing membrane (4) is a primary sealing membrane and the thermally insulating barrier (3) is a primary thermally insulating barrier, said juxtaposed insulating panels (5) being primary insulating panels, the tank walls (1, 12, 13) further comprising, successively in a direction of thickness, a secondary thermally insulating barrier including a plurality of juxtaposed secondary insulating panels, the secondary insulating panels being held against the supporting wall of the supporting structure (2), and a secondary sealing membrane supported by the secondary thermal insulating barrier and disposed between the secondary thermal insulating barrier and the primary thermally insulating barrier (3) such that the primary insulating panels (5) are held against the secondary sealing membrane.
13. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 1, wherein the bottom wall (12) comprises a sealing membrane (4) intended to be in contact with the liquefied gas contained in the tank and at least one thermal insulation barrier (3) arranged between the sealing membrane and a supporting wall of a supporting structure, the thermal insulation barrier including a plurality of juxtaposed insulating panels, wherein the sealing membrane of the bottom wall includes corrugated metal plates (9) juxtaposed to each other and comprising a first series of parallel corrugations (10), extending along a first direction and a second series of parallel corrugations (11) extending along a second direction, the corrugations protruding towards the inside of the tank and forming channels (14) for circulating a gas present in the thermally insulating barrier.
14. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 13, wherein the bottom wall (12) comprises filling elements (15) with pressure loss, which are disposed in the corrugations of the first series of corrugations (10) or of the second series of corrugations (11) so as to obstruct the circulation channel of said corrugations, the filling elements (15) being distributed over the entire bottom wall so as to form a staggered grid (19) of filling elements (15) in the circulation channels (14) of the bottom wall (12), and the filling elements (15) being configured to ensure a pressure loss reducing a gaseous flow passing through said circulation channel (14) by at least 80%.
15. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 13, wherein the tank (71) comprises filling elements (15) with pressure loss, which are disposed in the corrugations of the first series of corrugations (10, 28) or of the second series of corrugations (29) in each tank angle formed by the bottom wall (12) and one of the peripheral walls (1) so as to obstruct the circulation channel of said corrugations, the filling elements (15) forming an edge belt (27), the edge belt (27) being formed all round the bottom wall at said angles.
16. The tank (71) as claimed in claim 15, wherein each corrugation of the first series of corrugations (28) and of the second series of corrugations (29) of the bottom wall (12) is aligned with a corrugation of the first series of corrugations (10) of a peripheral wall (1) so as to form continuous circulation channels crossing the angles of the tank, the filling elements (15) of the edge belt (27) being disposed in each of said continuous circulation channels.
17. A vessel (70) for transporting a cold liquid product, the vessel including a double hull (72) and a tank (71) as claimed in claim 1 disposed in the double hull.
18. A system for transferring a cold liquid product, the system including a vessel (70) as claimed in claim 17, insulated pipes (73, 79, 76, 81) arranged so as to connect the tank (71) installed in the hull of the vessel to a floating or land storage installation (77) and a pump for sending a flow of cold liquid product through the insulated pipes from or to the floating or land storage installation to or from the tank of the vessel.
19. A method for loading or unloading a vessel (70) as claimed in claim 17, whereby a cold liquid product is fed through insulated pipes (73, 79, 76, 81) from or to a floating or land storage installation (77) to or from the tank (71) of the vessel.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0060] The invention will be better understood, and other aims, details, characteristics and advantages of same will appear more clearly during the following description of several particular embodiments of the invention, given only as an illustration and non-limitative, with reference to the attached drawings.
[0061]
[0062]
[0063]
[0064]
[0065]
[0066]
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[0068]
[0069]
[0070]
[0071]
[0072]
DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0073] The description below will describe a sealed and thermally insulating tank 71 for storing liquefied gas, comprising a bottom wall 12, a ceiling wall 13 and a plurality of peripheral walls 1 connecting the bottom wall 12 to the ceiling wall 13, walls 1, 12, 13 being fastened to a supporting structure 2. The peripheral walls are formed from vertical walls and potentially of inclined walls called chamfer walls. The particular case of a vertical wall is illustrated in
[0074] In the case of a vertical wall, the direction of greater slope of this wall is thus the vertical direction. The term “vertical” here means extending in the direction of the terrestrial gravity field. The term “horizontal” here means extending in a direction perpendicular to the vertical direction.
[0075] The liquefied gas intended to be stored in the tank 1 can in particular be a liquefied natural gas (LNG), that is to say a gaseous mixture including mostly methane and one or more other hydrocarbons. The liquefied gas can also be ethane or a liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), that is to say a mixture of hydrocarbons from oil refining including essentially propane and butane.
[0076] As shown in
[0077] In the illustrated embodiment, the thermally insulating barrier 3 includes a plurality of insulating panels 5 that are anchored to the supporting wall 2 by means of retaining means or couplers (not illustrated). The insulating panels 5 have a general parallelepiped shape and are disposed in parallel rows. The insulating blocks 5 can be made according to different structures.
[0078] An insulating panel 5 can be embodied in the form of a box including a base plate, a cover plate and supporting shells extending, in the direction of thickness of the tank wall, between the base plate and the cover plate and delimiting a plurality of compartments filled with an insulating filling, such as perlite, glass wool or rock wool. Such a general structure is described is described for example in WO2012/127141 or WO2017/103500.
[0079] An insulating panel 5 can also be embodied a base plate 7, a cover plate 6 and potentially an intermediate plate, for example made in plywood. The insulating block 5 also includes one or more layers of insulating polymer foam 8 sandwiched between the base plate 7, the cover plate 6 and the potential intermediate plate and bonded to same. The insulating polymer foam 8 can in particular be a foam based on polyurethane, optionally reinforced with fibers. Such a general structure is described for example in WO2017/006044.
[0080] The sealing membrane 4 consists of corrugated metal plates 9. These corrugated metal plates are for example in stainless steel whose thickness is approximately 1.2 mm and size 3 m by 1 m. The metal plate, rectangular in shape, includes a first series of parallel corrugations 10 extending in a direction x from one edge of the plate to the other, and a second series of parallel corrugations 11 extending in a direction y from one edge of the metal plate to the other. The directions x and y of the series of corrugations 10, 11 are perpendicular. The corrugations 10, 11 protrude for example on the side of the internal face of the metal plate, intended to be placed in contact with the fluid contained in the tank. The edges of the metal plate here are parallel to the corrugations. The corrugated metal plates include flat portions between the corrugations 10, 11. The intersection between a corrugation of the first series of corrugations 10 and a corrugation of the second series of corrugations 11 forms a corrugation node 20.
[0081] In the embodiment described above, a sealing membrane 4 and a thermally insulating barrier 3 have been illustrated and described. The tank wall 1 can therefore consist of a single sealing membrane 4 and a single thermally insulating barrier 3.
[0082] However, the tank wall 1 can also comprise a structure called structure with double membranes. In this case, the described thermally insulating barrier 3 is a primary thermally insulating barrier and the sealing membrane 4 is a primary sealing membrane. The tank wall 1 therefore also comprises a secondary thermally insulating barrier fastened to the supporting structure and a secondary sealing membrane supported by the secondary thermally insulating barrier and serving as a support for the primary thermally insulating barrier.
[0083] As explained previously, the corrugations of the first series 10 and of the second series 11 of the sealing membrane form circulating channels 14 for a gas present in the primary thermally insulating barrier. Furthermore, the channels 14 formed by the corrugations of the first series of corrugations 10 directed in the direction x, which is the direction of greater slope for an inclined wall, favor the circulation of gas by the thermosiphon effect.
[0084] So as to remedy this thermosiphon effect, in the embodiments described in the following, it is envisaged to locate, in the corrugations of the first series of corrugations 10 of the peripheral walls 1, filling elements with pressure loss 15, which are disposed in these corrugations 10 so as to obstruct the circulation channel 14 occasionally and therefore to cut off the circulation of the flow in this corrugation. So as to limit this thermosiphon effect throughout the tank, the filling elements with pressure loss 15 are disposed so as to form a plurality of belts 16 of filling elements. Each belt 16 of filling elements is embodied in a plane parallel to the bottom wall 12 and extending all round the tank 71 as visible in
[0085]
[0086] As visible on
[0087] So that the discontinuation part 18 does not allow the thermosiphon effect to become established, it is advantageous to limit the number and/or the size of the discontinuation parts 18 throughout the tank. It therefore seems advantageous that a belt 16 of filling elements does not include more than one discontinuation part 18 per peripheral wall 1.
[0088] In the first embodiment of
[0089]
[0090] Contrary to the first embodiment, the second embodiment envisages that a single belt 16 of filling elements includes a plurality of obstruction parts 17 and a plurality of discontinuation parts 18 all round the tank, while respecting a single discontinuation part per peripheral wall 1. Each obstruction part 17 defines an obstruction zone delimited by two discontinuation parts 18. In this embodiment, so as to maximize the route of the flow of gas and thus the pressure loss engendered on this flow, the discontinuation parts 18 of two adjacent belts 16 of filling elements are disposed either side of the peripheral wall 1, for example as illustrated on
[0091]
[0092] It should be noted that an insulating panel 5 situated under the corrugated metal plates 9 has a dimension making it possible, according to its orientation, to accommodate three to nine corrugations of the first series of corrugations 10. On
[0093] In the first variant illustrated on
[0094] In the second variant illustrated on
[0095] In the third variant illustrated in
[0096] On
[0097] The fourth variant illustrated in
[0098]
[0099] The filling element 15 of
[0100] The filling element 15 of
[0101]
[0102] On the peripheral walls 1, only the corrugations of the first series of corrugations 10, which have continuity with the corrugations of the bottom wall 12, have been shown. The corrugations of the first series of corrugations 28 and of the second series of corrugations 29 of the bottom wall have been shown. The number of corrugations of each wall 1, 12 is purely schematic so that the illustrations are legible.
[0103] On
[0104] In the embodiments illustrated in
[0105]
[0106]
[0107] With reference to
[0108] In a manner known per se, loading/unloading pipes 73 disposed on the upper deck of the tanker can be connected, by means of suitable connectors, to a sea or port terminal so as to transfer an LNG cargo from or to the tank 71.
[0109]
[0110] Pumps on board the tanker 70 and/or pumps equipping the installation on land 77 and/or pumps equipping the loading and unloading station 75 are used to generate the pressure needed for transferring the liquefied gas.
[0111] Although the invention has been described in connection with several particular embodiments, it is quite obvious that it is not at all limited to same and that it includes all the technical equivalents of the means described as well as combinations thereof if these enter into the framework of the invention.
[0112] The use of the verbs “include”, “comprise” or “incorporate” and their conjugated forms does not exclude the presence of other elements or other steps than those stated in a claim.
[0113] In the claims, any reference sign between brackets could not be interpreted as a limit to the claim.