jcoots
Mechanical
- May 16, 2005
- 44
I have a case where I have several boilers at 430(psi) @ 550(deg F) feeding into a high pressure header. I also have a few boilers at 275(psi) feeding into a low pressure header that feeds the factory equipment. I am considering joining the two headers having an expansion valve between the two thus converting the 430(psi) to 275(psi). After looking at the situation I find that through the expansion I trade pressure and temperature for greater volume. My specific volume starts at 1.282 cu.ft/lbm and expands to 2.003 cu.ft/lbm, the temperature decreases from 550F to 524F. I also find that the enthalpy remains the unchanged at 1,274 Btu/lbm. Thus my conclusion is even though the steam expands cools off and looses pressure I have the same amount of energy per pound. I would like someone to verify this conceptually at least. Theoretically it seems right but practically I think something is amiss.
The reasoning behind this setup is: The factory is out of wack, they have several boilers of different pressures and ratings. We are trying to get the best use out of them as a whole. The factory equipment is designed for 275(psi) and they already have a high pressure boiler on a generator. We are trying to find the best way to utilize the high pressure boilers.
Thanks,
The reasoning behind this setup is: The factory is out of wack, they have several boilers of different pressures and ratings. We are trying to get the best use out of them as a whole. The factory equipment is designed for 275(psi) and they already have a high pressure boiler on a generator. We are trying to find the best way to utilize the high pressure boilers.
Thanks,