Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Valve leakage

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Valve leakage refers to flow through a valve which is set in the 'off' state.

The importance of valve leakage depends on what the valve is controlling. For example, a dripping tap is less significant than a leak from a six-inch pipe carrying high-pressure radioactive steam.

In the United States, the American National Standards Institute specifies six different leakage classes, with "leakage" defined in terms of the full open valve capacity:

  • Class I, or 'dust-tight' valves, are intended to work but have not been tested
  • Class II valves have no more than 0.5% leakage with 50psi (or less if operating pressure is less) of air pressure at the operating temperature
  • Class III valves have no more than 0.1% leakage under those conditions; this may require soft valve seats, or lapped metal surfaces
  • Class IV valves have no more than 0.01% leakage under those conditions; this tends to require multiple graphite piston rings or a single Teflon piston ring, and lapped metal seats.
  • Class V valves leak less than 5*10^-12 cubic metres, per second, per bar of pressure differential, per millimetre of port diameter, of water when tested at the service pressure.
  • Class VI valves are slightly different in that they are required (at 50psi or operating pressure, whichever is less) to have less than a specified leakage rate in millilitres of air per minute:

    References

    Valve leakage Wikipedia