9402X
9404X
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Pressure and Vacuum Conservation Vents

Controlled breathing for storage tanks.

What It Is & How It Works

Pressure and vacuum conservation vents are weight-loaded relief devices mounted on storage tank roofs that let a tank breathe in a controlled way. They protect the shell from overpressure and vacuum damage caused by thermal expansion, product transfer, and ambient temperature changes, while minimizing vapor release to atmosphere. Every fixed-roof atmospheric tank must breathe, and the conservation vent ensures it does so only when pressure or vacuum exceeds a safe threshold.

The vent carries two independent pallet assemblies, one for pressure and one for vacuum, each held closed by calibrated weights. When tank pressure exceeds the pressure set point, the pressure pallet lifts to release vapor; when vacuum exceeds the vacuum set point, the vacuum pallet lifts to admit air. Both reseat automatically when the condition normalizes, requiring no external power, control signals, or operator action.

Conservation vents mount on standard roof nozzles and are sized per API 2000 from the tank’s thermal breathing rate and maximum pumping rates. Set points adjust by adding or removing weights, and materials are selected to match the product’s vapor corrosivity.

Conservation Vent vs. Emergency Vent

Conservation vents handle normal breathing during routine operations, pumping, and temperature changes. Emergency vents handle abnormal overpressure from external fire or equipment failure, delivering the large-volume relief a conservation vent is not sized for. Most tanks need both: a conservation vent for daily breathing, an emergency vent for fire-case protection.

When to Specify Pressure & Vacuum Conservation Vents

Conservation vents are specified on virtually every fixed-roof atmospheric tank that must control vapor emissions while preventing pressure and vacuum damage:

  • Fixed-Roof Petroleum Storage Tanks: Crude, refined product, and intermediate storage where API 2000 requires controlled pressure and vacuum relief and EPA 40 CFR 60/63 mandates vapor-tight closures to limit fugitive hydrocarbon emissions.
  • Chemical and Solvent Storage Needing Emission Control: Tanks storing volatile organic compounds where a sealed vent reduces vapor losses versus open venting, helping meet Title V limits and leak-detection-and-repair (LDAR) thresholds.
  • Tanks with Inert Gas Blanketing: Nitrogen-blanketed tanks where the vent holds a minimum positive pressure to preserve the blanket while relieving excess pressure during filling, without venting blanket gas unnecessarily.
  • Terminals and Tank Farms Under NFPA 30: Multi-tank facilities storing flammable or combustible liquids where NFPA 30 requires pressure and vacuum relief on each tank at the lowest installed and maintenance cost.
  • Water and Wastewater Treatment Chemical Storage: Tanks storing sodium hypochlorite, ferric chloride, or caustic soda where corrosion-resistant FRP or stainless vents prevent both vapor release and vacuum damage during batch deliveries.
Pressure and Vacuum Conservation Vents
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Why It Excels

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Tanks Requiring Reliable Protection Without External Power

Weight-loaded pallets operate purely on the pressure differential between vapor space and atmosphere, needing no electricity, pneumatics, control signals, or operator action to protect through power and control-system failures.

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Facilities Where Emission Reduction Drives Compliance

The sealed pallet design keeps the vapor space closed during normal conditions, releasing vapor only above the set point and lowering the cumulative fugitive emissions that feed Title V inventories.

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Multi-Tank Terminals Where Standardization Cuts Inventory Cost

A common vent platform across dozens or hundreds of tanks allows standardized spares, consistent maintenance procedures, and uniform operator training across the facility.

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Tanks Storing Products with Varying Vapor Pressures

Adjustable weight stacks let the same vent body be recalibrated for new set points when the stored product changes, accommodating seasonal switches without replacing the device.

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Breathing Vent Configurations — Selection Guide

Attribute Pressure & Vacuum Conservation Vent Pressure-Only Vent Vacuum-Only Vent  
Primary Function
Both pressure and vacuum relief in one device for bidirectional breathing Overpressure relief only; vacuum handled by a separate device or not required Vacuum relief only; pressure handled by a separate device such as a blanketing valve  
Pallet Configuration
Two pallet stacks, pressure and vacuum, in one housing Single pressure pallet; no vacuum pallet Single vacuum pallet; no pressure pallet  
Typical Set-point Range
Pressure 0.5 to 16 oz/sq in.; vacuum 0.5 to 8 oz/sq in. (weight-adjustable) 0.5 to 16 oz/sq in. pressure (weight-adjustable) 0.5 to 8 oz/sq in. vacuum (weight-adjustable)
When to Specify
Default for most atmospheric fixed-roof tanks needing both reliefs at one nozzle Blanketed tanks where a separate valve handles vacuum makeup and only pressure relief is needed Tanks where a separate pressure vent or pilot valve handles pressure relief  
Regulatory Driver
API 2000, EPA 40 CFR 60/63, NFPA 30 API 2000 pressure sizing, often with blanketing valves API 2000 vacuum sizing, API 650 structural vacuum limits  
Common Pairing
Flame arrester at outlet; emergency vent for fire case Blanketing valve for vacuum makeup; flame arrester at outlet Pressure vent or blanketing valve for pressure relief  
Recommendation
  • Standard breathing device for fixed-roof tanks storing volatile or flammable liquids needing both reliefs
  • Specify when a blanketing system provides vacuum makeup and only overpressure relief is needed
  • Specify when pressure relief is handled independently and a dedicated vacuum device is needed
 

What to Consider Alongside Pressure & Vacuum Conservation Vents

Consider an alternative when:

Tighter emission control or higher relief capacity is required. Pilot-operated relief valves provide a snap-action seal that eliminates the seat leakage weight-loaded vents allow near the set point, at higher effective capacity through the same nozzle. See Pilot Operated Relief Valves.

The tank needs only atmospheric open venting with weather protection. For non-volatile products at atmospheric pressure without emission concerns, a free vent breathes openly at lower cost. See Free Vents.

Corrosive service requires full FRP construction throughout. Where the vapor attacks metallic parts, FRP vents provide complete corrosion resistance from housing to pallet. See FRP Vents & Hatches.

How Conservation Vents Fit Into a Larger System

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Featured Products

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Shand & Jurs 9402X Pressure & Vacuum Conservation Vent (Weight Loaded)

Combined weight-loaded pressure and vacuum relief for atmospheric tanks, minimizing fugitive emissions during normal operations.

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Shand & Jurs 9404X Pressure & Vacuum Conservation Vent (Spring Loaded)

Spring-loaded bidirectional relief for tanks needing consistent set points across temperature swings and at higher pressures.

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Shand & Jurs 9406X Pressure & Vacuum Conservation Vent (FRP)

Corrosion-resistant pressure and vacuum relief for tanks storing chemicals or acids whose vapors attack carbon steel components.

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Not sure which configuration fits your tank?

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