zdas04
Mechanical
- Jun 25, 2002
- 10,274
I took a vessel design class in 1981 and I made a marginal note in my book that "it takes 6,500 BTU to cook 1 lbm of H2O from the glycol" of an atmospheric reboiler on a TEG dehydrator. I've been using that number for nearly 30 years without questioning it. Last week I had to figure a reboiler capacity and wondered where that number came from. The steam tables get me much closer to 1,000 BTU/lbm (based on the change in enthalpy) than 6,500. I could accept 25% efficiency and get 4,000 BTU/lbm, but I'm having a hard time justifying the 6,500 BTU/lbm that I've used forever. Can anyone explain it, or should I just not rely on my un-footnoted marginal notes from earlier decades?
David
David