LNG and LPG Safety Valves for Cryogenic, Storage and Vaporization Systems
LNG and LPG safety valves protect cryogenic transfer lines, storage vessels, vaporizers, loading skids, pressure build-up systems, transfer pumps, vapor return lines, compressor packages and blocked-in liquid sections from overpressure. LNG service is dominated by cryogenic temperature, boil-off gas and trapped liquid expansion, while LPG service is dominated by vapor pressure, fire exposure, saturated liquid-vapor behavior and safe discharge routing.
Where Safety Valves Are Used in LNG and LPG Systems
LNG and LPG applications are both hydrocarbon pressure relief services, but they should not be specified as the same valve duty. LNG is a cryogenic liquid service near -162°C, while LPG usually involves propane, butane or mixed LPG stored under pressure as a saturated liquid-vapor system.
LNG Storage and BOG Systems
Used on LNG storage-related packages, boil-off gas lines, pressure build-up systems, vapor handling skids and gas send-out lines. Key checks include low-temperature material, vapor generation, blocked outlet and safe venting.
LNG Transfer Lines
Used on liquid transfer lines, loading arms, unloading lines, cold boxes and blocked-in cryogenic sections. Thermal expansion of trapped liquid is often the most important relief case.
LNG Vaporizers
Used on ambient vaporizers, water bath vaporizers, steam-heated vaporizers and send-out skids. Relief review should consider heat input, outlet blockage, downstream regulator failure and vapor generation.
LPG Bullets and Spheres
Used on propane, butane and LPG mixture storage vessels. Fire exposure, vapor pressure, filling condition, liquid expansion and safe discharge direction are central to selection.
LPG Loading and Unloading Skids
Used on truck loading skids, railcar loading, transfer pumps, vapor return lines and metering skids. Relief cases include pump deadhead, thermal expansion, blocked outlet and hose isolation.
LPG Vaporizers and Fuel Gas Systems
Used on LPG vaporizers, pressure reduction stations, fuel gas supply skids and burner trains. The valve must be matched to vaporizer capacity, regulator failure and downstream pressure limits.
LNG and LPG PSV Selection Starts With the Overpressure Cause
A safety valve for LNG or LPG should be selected only after the credible overpressure scenario is defined. Cryogenic liquid expansion, vapor generation, fire exposure and blocked outlet can create very different required relieving capacities.
Trapped Cryogenic Liquid Expansion
LNG trapped between closed valves can warm up and expand. Even a short blocked-in liquid section can produce a severe pressure rise. Thermal relief valves should be installed where cryogenic liquid can be isolated.
Boil-Off Gas and Heat Leak
LNG storage and transfer systems always receive heat from the environment. Boil-off gas generation can increase pressure when vapor handling, venting or send-out systems are restricted.
Vaporizer Outlet Blockage
LNG or LPG vaporizers can continue generating vapor when downstream flow is restricted. Relief review should include vaporizer duty, heat input, outlet pressure limit and downstream regulator arrangement.
LPG Fire Exposure
LPG vessels contain saturated liquid-vapor hydrocarbon. External fire exposure can rapidly increase vapor generation and vessel pressure. Fire-case relief capacity and discharge direction must be reviewed together.
Pump Deadhead or Blocked Outlet
LPG transfer pumps, LNG send-out pumps and loading skids can overpressure lines if downstream valves are closed. Pump curve, maximum discharge pressure and protected line rating should be checked.
Regulator Failure or Pressure Reduction Upset
LPG vaporizers, fuel gas skids and LNG send-out systems often include regulators. Regulator failure can expose downstream piping or users to higher pressure than intended.
LNG and LPG Safety Valve Application Cases with Typical RFQ Data
These cases show how LNG and LPG safety valve requirements are commonly described before model selection. Final sizing must be confirmed by project datasheet, applicable code, verified relief calculation and site safety review.
Case 1: LNG Transfer Line Thermal Relief Valve
Cryogenic Thermal ReliefLNG thermal relief valves are often compact, but the service is severe. The valve must remain suitable at cryogenic temperature and should discharge to a safe location where cold vapor, frost or flammable gas accumulation will not create secondary risk.
Case 2: LNG Vaporizer Outlet Safety Valve
Vaporizer ProtectionVaporizer outlet valves should be selected from vaporizer maximum gas generation and downstream pressure boundary. The valve may see cold gas during startup or upset, so temperature range and material suitability should be confirmed.
Case 3: LNG Boil-Off Gas Line PSV
BOG Pressure ControlBOG relief should not be treated as ordinary natural gas service without checking temperature, operating pressure and discharge system. Back pressure and vent routing are critical when the valve discharges into a flare or recovery system.
Case 4: LPG Storage Bullet Fire Case PSV
Fire ExposureLPG storage relief is usually governed by fire exposure or vapor pressure rise. The RFQ should include storage condition, composition, set pressure, required capacity basis, discharge direction and documentation requirements.
Case 5: LPG Transfer Pump Discharge Relief
Pump DeadheadLPG transfer relief should avoid discharging flammable liquid or vapor to an unsafe area. Return routing, flashing behavior and pump deadhead pressure must be reviewed before selecting the valve.
Case 6: LPG Vaporizer Outlet Safety Valve
Fuel Gas SupplyLPG vaporizer outlet PSVs should be based on maximum vaporizer capacity and downstream pressure limits. The valve should protect low-pressure users from regulator failure and blocked outlet cases.
LNG and LPG Safety Valve Data Matrix
| Service | Typical Medium | Temperature / Phase Concern | Common Relief Cause | Required Engineering Check | Risk if Missed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LNG transfer line | Liquefied natural gas | Approx. -162°C / -260°F cryogenic liquid | Trapped liquid thermal expansion | Low-temperature material, seat behavior, discharge route and outlet icing | Line rupture, embrittlement or unsafe cold vapor release |
| LNG vaporizer | LNG and natural gas vapor | Cryogenic liquid to gas transition | Outlet blockage, regulator failure, excessive heat input | Vaporizer capacity, temperature range, downstream pressure limit | Undersized gas relief or wrong low-temperature material |
| BOG system | Methane-rich boil-off gas | Cold flammable vapor | Compressor trip, blocked outlet, heat leak | Gas capacity, low-temperature rating, back pressure and vent safety | Pressure rise, flammable gas accumulation or unstable relief |
| LPG storage | Propane, butane, LPG mixture | Saturated liquid-vapor hydrocarbon | Fire exposure, heat input, overfilling | Fire-case capacity, vapor pressure, discharge direction and certification documents | Undersized fire-case relief or unsafe flammable discharge |
| LPG transfer | Liquid LPG | Pressurized liquid with flashing potential | Pump deadhead, blocked outlet, trapped liquid expansion | Pump curve, set pressure, return routing and flashing behavior | Line overpressure or uncontrolled flammable release |
| LPG vaporizer | LPG vapor / propane vapor | Liquid-to-vapor supply system | Regulator failure, outlet blockage, excess vapor generation | Vaporizer capacity, downstream pressure boundary and safe venting | Downstream equipment overpressure or burner train risk |
How to Specify LNG and LPG Safety Valves Correctly
1. Identify LNG or LPG service clearly
State whether the valve is for LNG, BOG, natural gas vapor, propane, butane or LPG mixture. LNG requires cryogenic material review; LPG requires vapor pressure, fire case and saturated liquid-vapor behavior review.
2. Confirm fluid phase at relieving condition
The valve may relieve cryogenic liquid, cold gas, LPG liquid, LPG vapor, flashing liquid or two-phase flow. Phase condition affects sizing, discharge reaction, material and outlet arrangement.
3. Define the protected equipment
Confirm whether the valve protects a storage vessel, transfer line, vaporizer, pump discharge, loading skid, BOG header, fuel gas skid or blocked-in liquid section. Equipment design pressure defines the set pressure boundary.
4. Define the governing relief scenario
LNG relief may be governed by trapped liquid expansion, heat leak or BOG system upset. LPG relief may be governed by fire exposure, pump deadhead, overfilling, regulator failure or blocked outlet.
5. Review discharge destination
LNG and LPG relief streams are flammable. Discharge should be routed to a safe vent, flare, recovery line or return system based on site design. Vent location, cold vapor dispersion, fire exposure and operator safety must be checked.
6. Confirm testing and documents
LNG and LPG projects commonly require datasheets, set pressure calibration, pressure test records, seat tightness test, material certificates, low-temperature material confirmation, nameplate marking and inspection documents.
LNG and LPG Safety Valves Must Be Reviewed With Venting, Return and Flare Systems
Why the discharge route is part of valve selection
LNG and LPG relief streams are flammable and can form hazardous vapor clouds if released improperly. LNG relief can also create extremely cold vapor, frost and low-temperature exposure. LPG relief may flash from liquid to vapor and create high discharge reaction force, noise and fire risk.
Safety valve selection should include inlet pressure loss, outlet back pressure, vent height, outlet direction, drainage, cold exposure, flame-safe location, pipe support and maintenance access. For flare or closed systems, the back pressure must be reviewed before valve configuration is finalized.
Field installation checks
- Install thermal relief where LNG or LPG liquid can be blocked in.
- Confirm low-temperature material for LNG-contacted pressure parts.
- Route LNG and LPG discharge to a safe vent, flare, return or recovery system.
- Check outlet back pressure when connected to flare or closed discharge headers.
- Avoid cold vapor discharge toward personnel, instruments or brittle materials.
- Support outlet piping without loading the valve body.
- Provide access for inspection, recalibration and safe valve replacement.
Standards and Documents to Confirm Before Ordering
Common standard references
LNG and LPG pressure relief specifications may reference API, ASME, ISO, EN, GB, NFPA or owner standards depending on the facility type, country, pressure equipment, storage arrangement and inspection requirement. The applicable standard should be confirmed before quotation.
- API 520 for pressure-relieving device sizing and selection reference where required by the project.
- API 521 for pressure-relieving and depressuring system review in LNG and hydrocarbon facilities.
- API 526 when flanged steel pressure relief valve dimensions and ratings are specified.
- API 527 when seat tightness testing is required.
- ASME BPVC or local pressure vessel requirements for storage vessels and pressure equipment.
- ISO 4126 references when project specifications require excessive pressure protection safety valve standards.
- Owner specifications for cryogenic material, LPG storage, fire-case relief and inspection documents.
Typical document package
Documentation should be agreed before manufacturing, especially for LNG cryogenic service, LPG storage, vaporizers, loading skids, tank protection and flare-connected applications.
- Technical datasheet with model, size, orifice, set pressure and connection.
- Sizing calculation or certified relieving capacity confirmation.
- Set pressure calibration record.
- Pressure test report and seat tightness test report when required.
- Material certificate for pressure-retaining parts and trim when specified.
- Low-temperature material confirmation for LNG service when required.
- General arrangement drawing, dimension, weight and discharge orientation.
- Nameplate, tag number and project marking confirmation.
LNG and LPG Safety Valve RFQ Data Checklist
| Required Data | Why It Matters | Example Input |
|---|---|---|
| Service type | Separates cryogenic LNG duty from saturated LPG duty. | LNG, BOG, natural gas vapor, propane, butane, mixed LPG |
| Fluid phase | Affects sizing, materials and discharge behavior. | Cryogenic liquid, cold gas, LPG liquid, LPG vapor, flashing liquid |
| Protected equipment | Defines pressure boundary and overpressure source. | Storage vessel, transfer line, vaporizer, pump discharge, loading skid |
| Relief scenario | Determines required relieving capacity. | Thermal expansion, fire case, blocked outlet, vaporizer outlet blockage |
| Set pressure | Defines valve opening pressure. | Project datasheet value, vessel MAWP-based value, line protection value |
| Operating pressure | Confirms operating margin and leakage risk. | Normal and maximum operating pressure |
| Required relieving capacity | Confirms whether the selected valve can protect the system. | kg/h, Nm³/h, SCFM, t/h, GPM, L/min |
| Relieving temperature | Affects material, seals and pressure rating. | -162°C LNG, cold gas, ambient LPG, elevated vaporizer outlet |
| Back pressure | Influences valve capacity and stability. | Atmospheric vent, flare header, recovery system, return line |
| Material requirement | Prevents embrittlement, leakage and compatibility failure. | Low-temperature stainless steel, carbon steel, stainless steel, special trim |
| Connection and rating | Ensures mechanical compatibility with piping and equipment. | RF flange, RTJ flange, NPT, BW, Class 150–2500 |
| Required documents | Avoids delays after purchase order. | Datasheet, drawing, MTC, calibration report, pressure test, seat tightness report |
Final selection must be confirmed by project datasheet, protected equipment design pressure, fluid properties, applicable code, verified sizing basis and engineering review.
Common LNG and LPG Safety Valve Selection Mistakes
Treating LNG as normal natural gas
LNG service requires cryogenic material review and low-temperature sealing consideration. A valve suitable for ambient natural gas may not be suitable for LNG-contacted parts.
Missing blocked-in liquid relief
LNG or LPG liquid trapped between closed valves can overpressure as temperature changes. Thermal relief should be reviewed for every isolated liquid section.
Underestimating LPG fire-case capacity
LPG storage vessels may require significant relief capacity during external fire exposure. Fire case should be reviewed from storage geometry and fluid condition, not guessed from nozzle size.
Ignoring flare or vent back pressure
Closed discharge, flare or recovery systems can create back pressure that affects capacity and stability. Back pressure should be reviewed before valve configuration is selected.
Routing flammable vapor to unsafe areas
LNG and LPG relief can form flammable vapor clouds. Discharge should be routed to a safe vent, flare, return or recovery system according to site requirements.
Replacing by pressure rating only
Replacement should confirm service type, phase, set pressure, capacity, material, temperature, discharge arrangement, seat tightness and documentation requirements.
Continue Your LNG and LPG Pressure Relief Review
These related pages help move from LNG and LPG application requirements to detailed safety valve selection, sizing, service-condition review and standard confirmation.
LNG and LPG Safety Valve FAQ
Prepare a Complete LNG or LPG PSV Datasheet Before Quotation
Send the service type, phase, protected equipment, relief scenario, set pressure, operating pressure, required capacity, temperature, back pressure, material requirement, connection standard and required documents. A complete datasheet helps avoid unsafe assumptions and speeds up engineering review.
