Rosalynn
Chemical
- Feb 19, 2003
- 28
I have a project to increase the throughput in an asphalt plant. One of my ideas is to increase the temperature entering the first flash vessel in the unit, by making the feed/preheat train more efficient. There is no fired heater upstream of the first flash vessel and to keep op costs and cap costs low, I'd like to avoid installing one.
I am aware that flashing in heat exchangers reduces the effective heat transfer coefficient because of the differences in thermal properties between vapour and liquid, but are there other reasons out there for avoiding flashing in a heat exchanger?
I have a backpressure controller on the outlet of the preheat train, so I can suppress flashing in the exchangers to a certain extent; however, the supply pressure is limited. I'm looking at up to 13 mol% flashing, but expect the economic option would be somewhere between 5 and 10 mol%.
I am aware that flashing in heat exchangers reduces the effective heat transfer coefficient because of the differences in thermal properties between vapour and liquid, but are there other reasons out there for avoiding flashing in a heat exchanger?
I have a backpressure controller on the outlet of the preheat train, so I can suppress flashing in the exchangers to a certain extent; however, the supply pressure is limited. I'm looking at up to 13 mol% flashing, but expect the economic option would be somewhere between 5 and 10 mol%.