noteye:
I'm going to assume you are working in a USA location; and if I'm correct, then you should be warned that you are putting the cart before the horse with you query.
For Process Safety Management and Management of Change, you must prepare for a HazOp - as a minimum requirement. In doing so, you have to confront and address the obvious safety concerns that will immediately jump right up at you:
1) What can happen to the equipment, process, piping and the chemicals themselves in the Sulfuric Acid stream should trichloroethylene get into this stream? Only you can answer this question. Your company (or you should have all the information about the chemicals you produce and work with in your process environment. OSHA holds you directly responsible for knowing this information and designing around it.
2) We on this Forum don't know what other weak or hazadous devices or possibilities exist in your process. Again, only you can answer this question.
3) You haven't stated if this is a retrofit project or a new application. But regardless, you must have done some preliminary design work and research before proposing this application. Is this the stage you presently find yourself in? If so, you should study your as-built P&ID in order to identify all potentially affected equipment and flow streams.
4) You can certainly profit by MJCronin's advice on using a TEMA double tubesheet design heat exchanger; this is always a viable option to consider.
5) Depending on the risk and hazards involved, you can also employ an intermediate coolant stream instead of the trichloroethylene - something like a chemical compatible with the Sulfuric.
Art Montemayor
Spring, TX