What Is Nitrogen Blanketing?

Nitrogen blanketing — also called nitrogen padding or nitrogen sparging — is the practice of maintaining a continuous supply of inert nitrogen gas in the vapor space above the liquid contents of a storage tank or vessel. The nitrogen displaces and excludes atmospheric air from the vapor space, eliminating the oxygen that would otherwise mix with hydrocarbon vapors to form a flammable or explosive atmosphere.

A properly blanketed tank has a low positive pressure of nitrogen (typically 1–4 oz/in² above atmospheric pressure) in the vapor space at all times. This positive pressure prevents air from being drawn in as the liquid level drops or as temperature decreases (both of which would otherwise reduce vapor space pressure below atmospheric and allow air ingress).

Why Is Nitrogen Blanketing Used?

Fire and Explosion Prevention

The primary reason for nitrogen blanketing is to prevent the accumulation of flammable hydrocarbon vapor-air mixtures in the tank vapor space. For volatile products like crude oil, condensate, light naphtha, or gasoline, the vapor space concentration of hydrocarbons at normal storage temperatures is above the upper explosive limit (UEL) — meaning the mixture is too rich to ignite with available air. However, as the tank breathes (as liquid level drops or temperature falls), air enters and mixes with the hydrocarbon vapor to create a flammable mixture in the transition zone. Nitrogen blanketing prevents this by replacing the air before it can enter.

Product Quality Protection

Oxygen in contact with many petroleum products causes oxidation reactions that degrade product quality — color darkening, gum and peroxide formation, acid number increases, and flash point reduction in refined products. Lubricating oils, specialty chemicals, and pharmaceutical-grade products are especially sensitive. Nitrogen blanketing prevents oxygen from ever contacting the product surface.

Moisture Exclusion

Air contains water vapor. When air enters a tank vapor space and the temperature drops at night, moisture condenses on the tank roof and walls and drips back into the product. Over time, this moisture accumulation causes water-oil emulsions, corrosion of tank internals, and contamination of water-sensitive products. Nitrogen blanketing eliminates the humid air that is the source of this moisture.

Regulatory Compliance

Many tank farm operators use nitrogen blanketing as part of their compliance strategy with EPA and state air quality regulations governing volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions from storage tanks. Nitrogen blanketing reduces the breathing loss — the hydrocarbon vapor that would otherwise be released to atmosphere during tank level and temperature changes — by eliminating the air exchange that drives that breathing loss.

How a Nitrogen Blanketing System Works

A tank nitrogen blanketing system consists of:

The system operates automatically. When the liquid level in the tank drops (as product is pumped out), the vapor space expands. The pressure in the vapor space tends to drop toward atmospheric or below. The blanket regulator detects this pressure drop and opens to supply nitrogen, maintaining positive pressure. When product is pumped into the tank, liquid level rises, vapor space contracts, pressure rises, and the conservation vent opens to release excess vapor (either to a vapor recovery unit or to a flame arrester-equipped vent).

Types of Tanks and Vessels That Use Nitrogen Blanketing

Nitrogen Supply for Continuous Blanketing Applications

Continuous tank blanketing requires a reliable, ongoing nitrogen supply. The options are:

NitroTech supports tank blanketing projects with mobile nitrogen supply and trailer-mounted generation. Learn more about industrial nitrogen services or contact us.

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