We have designed an all steel condenser with five passes of water cooling. It is 600 mm diameter and 3 metres between tube plates with 300 tubes. The total area for heat exchange is 49 square metres.
The first pass ensures that the extraction region for un-condensibles is the coolest part. The pass that is warmest is at the bottom so that condensate undercooling is kept to a minimum, hopefully less than 4K.
The pass where steam first enters at about 20 metres per second has sparse tubes. That will limit the velocity where steam passes between the tubes and accelerates to about 32 metres per second.
Some, very limited, sources of information suggest that droplet erosion increases rapidly as the steam velocity rises above 35 metres per second. Any harder evidence of that would be great to have.
Given the relatively small steam rate of our system, about 1600 pound per hour, the condensate extraction is a challenge. We have opted for a unique system. Pumps are available for larger system but consume too much power for our system. As yet I cannot say more about the trap.
This week we found a supplier that can supply condensers, off the shelf. About 50% cheaper than building a one-off condenser to our design. Later we may find our design is cheaper, for volume manufacture. It seems to me that 300 tubes, 16 mm diameter, to expand into two tube plates with one shell must be cheaper than a total of 1392 tubes 9.5 mm in diameter expanded into six tube plates. The key here is volume production.