jbkiser
Chemical
- Nov 17, 2015
- 2
We have a quench tower that is circulating diesel fuel as the cooling fluid. The gas being cooled in the tower has some water vapor in it and
we typically run the diesel oil high enough that the gas never cools below 230, so it stays in the vapor phase and we remove the water further downstream. When we startup however, we start at ambient conditions where the gas is initially cooled below 212 and the water condenses into the oil. This shouldn't be a problem because once we get to our typical operating temperature it would simply boil off.
But we do have a problem right at the transition point. We have run a number of tests and see our diesel pumps consistently begin erratic pumping at about 220F and at about 230F stop pumping altogether. We think what's happening is the pressure drop at the pump suction is flashing liquid to vapor and our centrifugal pumps are simply spinning in water vapor. This seems to be worse as we approach a filter changes suggesting the back pressure across the filters is making matters worse. Even after a filter changes, we have trouble recovering consistent pump volumes unless we let the oil cool back down.
Has anyone run into this before and have a suggested solution to prevent this?
Thanks
we typically run the diesel oil high enough that the gas never cools below 230, so it stays in the vapor phase and we remove the water further downstream. When we startup however, we start at ambient conditions where the gas is initially cooled below 212 and the water condenses into the oil. This shouldn't be a problem because once we get to our typical operating temperature it would simply boil off.
But we do have a problem right at the transition point. We have run a number of tests and see our diesel pumps consistently begin erratic pumping at about 220F and at about 230F stop pumping altogether. We think what's happening is the pressure drop at the pump suction is flashing liquid to vapor and our centrifugal pumps are simply spinning in water vapor. This seems to be worse as we approach a filter changes suggesting the back pressure across the filters is making matters worse. Even after a filter changes, we have trouble recovering consistent pump volumes unless we let the oil cool back down.
Has anyone run into this before and have a suggested solution to prevent this?
Thanks