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1
- #1
Casimo5
Chemical
- Nov 14, 2005
- 50
If it is suspected that a tube or tubes are leaking inside a shell/tube heat exchanger, what impact, if any, do the testing conditions have if they are not the same as the operating conditions.
In our case, we have an exchanger that is suspect. The exchanger has cooling water in the tubes, and vapors going to a vacuum jet on the shell side. We are seeing a large amount of water (greater than normal) in the shell side. At this point, there are mainly non-condensibles in the vapor side (this is the 3rd condenser in the vacuum system), so the tubes are suspected of leaking.
When checking for leakes, we took both heads off the condenser (a two pass shell/tube exchanger) and filled the shell side with water and pressured it up to 80 psig. Then we dried the tubes as much as we could by blowing them with high pressure nitrogen, each tube individually. We then waited for 30 minutes and then blew the tubes out again, no water came out of any of them.
The conclusion is that there are no leaks. However, the condenser is normally above 200 deg F, and for the test, it was significantly cooler, say around 80 deg F. Could it be possible that any small cracks in a tube would close up when the metal contracts as it cools? Then when it heats up because of the process, they would expand and allow water to leak through? The tubes are stainless steel.
In our case, we have an exchanger that is suspect. The exchanger has cooling water in the tubes, and vapors going to a vacuum jet on the shell side. We are seeing a large amount of water (greater than normal) in the shell side. At this point, there are mainly non-condensibles in the vapor side (this is the 3rd condenser in the vacuum system), so the tubes are suspected of leaking.
When checking for leakes, we took both heads off the condenser (a two pass shell/tube exchanger) and filled the shell side with water and pressured it up to 80 psig. Then we dried the tubes as much as we could by blowing them with high pressure nitrogen, each tube individually. We then waited for 30 minutes and then blew the tubes out again, no water came out of any of them.
The conclusion is that there are no leaks. However, the condenser is normally above 200 deg F, and for the test, it was significantly cooler, say around 80 deg F. Could it be possible that any small cracks in a tube would close up when the metal contracts as it cools? Then when it heats up because of the process, they would expand and allow water to leak through? The tubes are stainless steel.