imatasb
Chemical
- Jul 17, 2003
- 32
Good morning,
we are thinking of recovering more heat of a residue current for generating more steam.
The idea is to extend the lengths of the tubes of a shell and tube heat exchanger whils keeping the current diameter.
At the moment we basically heat a boilerfeedwater current and just produce 1% of steam but with the new heat exchanger we will be able to produce 10% of steams in the tube side. The current goes into a vapor/liquid separator.
I have seen the simulation of the new heat exchanger and noticed that the velocity in the outlet nozzle was 6.9 m/s.
Whilst hte criteria of velocity for tubes are quite clear:
*3-5 ft/s (0.9-1.5 m/s) for liquids
*50-100 ft/s (15-30 m/s) for gases
I am not sure for a two phase flow. Could anyone which velocities could be considered for a two phase case?
The performance check of the heat exchanger says ok and the pressure drop was ok as well at 0.8 kg/cm2. I was thinking of maybe erosion due to the high velocity in the liquid
Thank you for your answers.
we are thinking of recovering more heat of a residue current for generating more steam.
The idea is to extend the lengths of the tubes of a shell and tube heat exchanger whils keeping the current diameter.
At the moment we basically heat a boilerfeedwater current and just produce 1% of steam but with the new heat exchanger we will be able to produce 10% of steams in the tube side. The current goes into a vapor/liquid separator.
I have seen the simulation of the new heat exchanger and noticed that the velocity in the outlet nozzle was 6.9 m/s.
Whilst hte criteria of velocity for tubes are quite clear:
*3-5 ft/s (0.9-1.5 m/s) for liquids
*50-100 ft/s (15-30 m/s) for gases
I am not sure for a two phase flow. Could anyone which velocities could be considered for a two phase case?
The performance check of the heat exchanger says ok and the pressure drop was ok as well at 0.8 kg/cm2. I was thinking of maybe erosion due to the high velocity in the liquid
Thank you for your answers.