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Explained
As a general rule, the smaller the contact surface area between the flange faces, the
harder the gasket and flange sealing surface material will be. This is because a smaller
sealing face area means a larger pressure can be applied with less force (pressure = force /
area). Harder materials require a larger pressure to seal than softer materials, even if the
surfaces are ground and lapped before mating. In order to reach higher pressures without
needing to apply excessive torque to the fasteners, the contact surface area of the sealing
face is reduced in size
For this reason, flat face flanges have gaskets that extend from the flange’s inner
diameter to the flange’s outside diameter; these types of gaskets are known as ‘full face’
gaskets and have a large contact sealing area. Raised face flanges only have a gasket on
the raised face; these types of gaskets are known as ‘flat ring’ gaskets. For ring-type joint
flanges, the sealing area is comparatively small, and the gasket material comparatively
hard (metal).
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Gaskets are installed directly on the front sealing face of the flange blade i.e. on the same
plane as the bolting circle face. The gasket sealing area is from the inner flange diameter
to the outer flange diameter. Typical soft gasket materials are usually rated to 100⁰C
(212⁰F) and not more than 20 bar (290 psi) pressure. Because flat face flanges use such a
large sealing area, they are made to fit. Flat face flange gaskets cannot rotate once
installed due to the bolt hole penetrations through the gasket. Due to the large size of the
sealing face, flat face flanges are resistant to mechanical distorting (bending, bowing etc.).
Flat face flanges should never be mated with raised face flanges, particularly if the
raised face flange is manufactured from a harder material.
RF flanges use serrated sealing surfaces with non-metallic or semi-metallic type gaskets.
The sealing face of an RF flange is from the flange’s inner diameter to the outside
diameter of the raised face. A typical gasket for RF flanges would be a graphite steel
composition gasket with a temperature rating up to 400⁰C (750⁰F) and a pressure rating of
up to 250 bar (3,625 psi).
The height of the raised face above the bolting face plane is dictated by the flange’s class
and the standard from which it is taken. For the ASME B16.5 standard, steel flanges in
classes 150 and 300 have a raised face height of 1/16 inch (1.6mm); steel flanges
exceeding class 300 use a 1/4 inch (6.4mm) raised face. In an ideal world, the height of a
raised face would increase as the class increases, but this does not occur in most standards;
it is, however, a logical generalisation.
The difference between an RTJ flange and a raised face flange is the way a seal is obtained.
Metal gaskets (hard) are used with RTJ flanges, whilst raised face gaskets use soft or semi-
metallic gaskets. There are three main ring type joint groups, these are R, RX and BX; we
will focus on the R type joint because it is by far the most common.
R-type RTJ gaskets are circular in shape with an oval or octagonal shaped profile/body;
the octagonal profile obtains the most efficient seal and is the more modern design. A
groove is machined into the face of an RTJ flange and the associated gasket is installed into
this groove. When the flange is assembled, the two mating faces compress the gasket until
it deforms and a metal to metal seal is formed. If the flange is assembled correctly, the two
mating RTJ flanges should not come into physical contact with each other
RTJ gaskets are often manufactured from a material slightly softer than that of the flange.
Because the gasket material is softer, it deforms at a lower pressure than the flange, this
ensures that it is the gasket that deforms to make the seal rather than the flange deforming
around the gasket.