JVKS
Mechanical
- May 23, 2010
- 9
looking to figure the heat loss from steam and condensate piping in a buried "concrete conduit." the conduit is a concrete tunnel about 1' tall by about 1' wide that is buried at a depth from 3' to 10' - hilly terrain. the conduit is open at both ends to the steam pits or buildings. the steam piping is 3" at 100 psi with 2" of mineral wool, the condensate is 2" with 1" mineral wool.
if it was a buried insulated pipe i use the simple method of assuming the earth is at a relativley constant temperature and cipher it from that. i try to be conservative and the number are good enough.
any thought on the best way to approach this? i am thinking of including the space between the outside of the insulation and the inside of the concrete and the concrete as more insulation and figure the heat loss from there. among other things this basically ignores any convection in the conduit space.
the actual situation is much more complicated and messier than i describe.
if it was a buried insulated pipe i use the simple method of assuming the earth is at a relativley constant temperature and cipher it from that. i try to be conservative and the number are good enough.
any thought on the best way to approach this? i am thinking of including the space between the outside of the insulation and the inside of the concrete and the concrete as more insulation and figure the heat loss from there. among other things this basically ignores any convection in the conduit space.
the actual situation is much more complicated and messier than i describe.