lastone
Chemical
- Jul 14, 2003
- 48
I'm looking for some advice on injecting hot condensate into a cooling water return line.
Process conditions:
Condensate is at 300 deg F, 135 psig, flowrate = 300 gpm
Cooling Water is 90 deg F, 5 psig, flowrate = 15000 gpm
The condensate injection line would be a 2" line coming off of a 4" vertical line, run horizontally about 7 ft, and inject into the top of a 24" cooling water line that runs horizontally. I know from the heat balance that my cooling water would see a temperature increase of approximately 3.5 degrees. This is not a problem, but what I am not sure of is what will happen in the 24" cooling water line. I suspect that the hot condensate will flash upon mixing with the cooling water and then immediately collapse upon itself, similar to cavitation. What I do not know is how this will affect the pipe. The 24" line is supported in an elevated pipe rack. Would this create vibration or potentially rock the 24" header around? Obviously I cannot afford to damage the 24" header so any advice or experience with something like this would be greatly appreciated.
Process conditions:
Condensate is at 300 deg F, 135 psig, flowrate = 300 gpm
Cooling Water is 90 deg F, 5 psig, flowrate = 15000 gpm
The condensate injection line would be a 2" line coming off of a 4" vertical line, run horizontally about 7 ft, and inject into the top of a 24" cooling water line that runs horizontally. I know from the heat balance that my cooling water would see a temperature increase of approximately 3.5 degrees. This is not a problem, but what I am not sure of is what will happen in the 24" cooling water line. I suspect that the hot condensate will flash upon mixing with the cooling water and then immediately collapse upon itself, similar to cavitation. What I do not know is how this will affect the pipe. The 24" line is supported in an elevated pipe rack. Would this create vibration or potentially rock the 24" header around? Obviously I cannot afford to damage the 24" header so any advice or experience with something like this would be greatly appreciated.