Common
Types of Pipeline Flange Faces
Flanges provide the
necessary connections to link pipelines. Faces are the mating surface of a
flange. Flange faces have to be smooth enough to ensure a tight, leak-free seal
for bolted flanges. For the purpose of this article, we will be focusing on five
common types of flange faces:
1. Raised Face (RF)
2. Flat Face (FF)
3. Ring-Type Joint
(RTJ)
4. Male-and-Female
(M&F)
5. Tongue-and-Groove
(T&G)
Raised Face (RF)
The Raised Face type
is the most applied flange type, and is easily to identify. It is called raised
face because the gasket is raised 1/16" to 1/4" above the bolt circle
face. This face type allows the use of a wide combination of gasket designs,
including flat ring sheet types and metallic composites such as spiral wound
and double jacketed types.
The purpose of a RF
flange is to concentrate more pressure on a smaller gasket area and thereby
increase the pressure containment capability of the joint.
Flat Face (FF)
The flat face (full
face) flange has a gasket surface in the same plane as the bolting circle face.
Applications using flat face flanges are frequently those in which the mating
flange or flanged fitting is made from a casting.
Flat face flanges
are never to be bolted to a raised face flange. When connecting flat face cast
iron flanges to carbon steel flanges, the raised face on the carbon steel
flange must be removed, and that a full face gasket is required. Flat face
flanges are used on pump facings or on fiberglass flanges where the torque of
compressing the gasket will damage the flange body and on cast iron flanges
sometimes found on mechanical equipment that can cause complications due to the
brittle nature of cast iron. Forged steel flat face flanges are often found
150# and 300# ratings.
The Flat Face flange
has a gasket surface in the same plane as the bolting circle face. Applications
using flat face flanges are frequently those in which the mating flange or
flanged fitting is made from a casting.
Ring-Type Joint (RTJ)
The Ring Type Joint
flanges are typically used in high pressure (Class 600 and higher rating) and
high temperature services above 800°F (427°C).
RTJ flanges have
grooves cut into their faces. An RTJ flange may have a raised face with a ring
groove machined into it. This raised face does not serve as any part of the
sealing means. For RTJ flanges that seal with ring gaskets, the raised faces of
the connected and tightened flanges may contact each other. In this case the
compressed gasket will not bear additional load beyond the bolt tension,
vibration and movement cannot further crush the gasket and lessen the
connecting tension.
Ring-type joints
(RTJ) are considered to be the most efficient flanges for use in pipeline
design. Rather than using a gasket between connecting flanges, RTJ have a deep
groove in a ring shared around the face.
Ring type gaskets
must be used on this type of flange. Ring Type Joint gaskets are metallic
sealing rings, suitable for high-pressure and high-temperature
applications.
Tongue-and-Groove (T&G)
With this type the
flanges must be matched. One flange face has a raised ring (Tongue) machined
onto the flange face while the mating flange has a matching depression (Groove)
machined into it′s face. These facings are commonly found on pump covers and
valve bonnets.
Tongue-and-groove
facings are standardized in both large and small types. They differ from
male-and-female in that the inside diameters of the tongue-and-groove do not
extend into the flange base, thus retaining the gasket on its inner and outer
diameter.
Tongue-and-groove
joints also have an advantage in that they are self-aligning and act as a
reservoir for the adhesive. The scarf joint keeps the axis of loading in line
with the joint and does not require a major machining operation.
Male-and-Female (M&F)
This type of flanges
also must be matched. One flange face has an area that extends beyond the
normal flange face (Male). The other flange or mating flange has a matching
depression (Female) machined into it′s face. Custom male and female facings are
commonly found on the heat exchanger shell to channel and cover flanges. The
female face and the male face are smooth finished. The outer diameter of the
female face acts to locate and retain the gasket.
Advantages:
Better sealing
properties, more precise location and exact compression of sealing material,
utilization of other, more suitable sealing and specialized sealing material.
Disadvantages:
Normal raised faced
is far more common and ready available both regarding Valves, flanges and
sealing material. Another complexity is that some rigid rules must be applied
to the piping design.
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