Fundamentals of Pressure and Temperature Measurement: Example - Calculation at .25 Psig
Fundamentals of Pressure and Temperature Measurement: Example - Calculation at .25 Psig
Jeff Goetzman
CenterPoint Energy.
1111 Louisiana
Houston, Texas 77002
Correctly
measuring
Pressure
and
Temperature is one of the most important
elements in the accurate measurement of
Natural Gas. The basic theories on Pressure
and Temperature Compensation were
established many years ago by two men,
Robert Boyle an Anglo Irish philosopher,
chemist, and physicist and Jacques Charles,
a
French
Inventor,
scientist
and
mathematician.
Since we are discussing Fundamentals we
will try to keep our discussion as simple
possible.
Boyles Law
In 1662 Robert Boyle first published what
today is known as Boyles Law. This law can
be simply stated as: For a fixed amount of
ideal gas kept at a fixed temperature,
Pressure [P] and Volume [V] are inversely
proportional. That is when pressure is
doubled the volume is halved.
(
(
Supercompressibility
All gases deviate slightly from Boyles Law.
The volume of gas at higher pressures is
typically higher than the theoretical
pressure. As such we must calculate a
Supercompressibility Factor (Fpv) to make
this correction. This factor is increasingly
important at higher pressures and lower
temperatures. The most common current
standard
for
the
calculation
of
Supercompressibility is AGA8. A simpler but
less accurate method is NX-19. AGA8 is
quite complex so in the interest keeping
things fundamentally simple we wont delve
into the details here. The best way to handle
Supercompressibility calculations is to use
one of the commonly available AGA 3 or
AGA7 calculation programs which have Fpv
calculation imbedded in them.
Apples to Apples
When comparing any two volumes its
important that we compare them on an
equal basis. We cant compare apples to
oranges and not expect to see a difference.
For instance if we buy gas at one contracted
Base Pressure and sell it at another Base
Pressure then we need to compare them at
a common Base pressure.
For our example lets say we purchase
9,946 mcf @ 14.73 pressure base. Then we
sell 10,000 mcf @ 14.65 pressure base. It
appears that 10,000 mcf sales minus 9,946
mcf purchase = 54 mcf gain. However the
exact amount of gas was purchased and
sold. They were just at calculated at different
pressure bases.
To convert the 14.73 pressure base volume
to 14.65:
Key Elements
Select
accurate
and
Measurement devices.
to
reliable
a
good
Summary
Fundamentals are always the key to
success. You cant do Algebra without the
fundamentals of addition, subtraction,
multiplication and division. Similarly without
the proper Pressure and Temperature
Measurement fundamentals you cant have
a successful Measurement Program.
Properly addressing the fundamentals will
install the proper building block to success.
Terms
Acf Actual Cubic Feet. Also referred to as
the uncorrected volume or Index Volume.
Volume measured by a positive
displacement meter before its corrected for
temperature
Base Conditions The Delivery Pressure,
Base Pressure, Atmospheric Pressure and
Base Temperature that Natural Gas in
Cf = Cubic Foot