Glenfiddich
Chemical
- Sep 14, 2007
- 51
ok, this is a subject which I don't think alot of process engineers care too much about. Why would you design a series of heat exchangers so that it creates 2 phase flow before it enters a flash drum? For example, you have 3 heat exchangers in series and then a flash drum. After the 2nd heat exchanger the flow becomes 2 phase. The typical engineer would then size the 3rd heat exchanger for 2 phase flow.
Why on earth would you not put a backpressure control valve just upstream of the flash drum to keep the fluid in 100% liquid state? The extra backpressure would make the 3rd heat exchanger sizing much smaller than if it was sized for 2 phase.
Why on earth would you not put a backpressure control valve just upstream of the flash drum to keep the fluid in 100% liquid state? The extra backpressure would make the 3rd heat exchanger sizing much smaller than if it was sized for 2 phase.