BenjaminM
Chemical
- Dec 12, 2006
- 88
I am trying to decide how to go about determining the optimal steam pressure for a reactor jacket. For the sake of argument, I'll just say we're heating water.
The jacket is rated for 150 psig, and we have somewhere around 145 psig steam available. Historically we'd stick a 50 psi regulator in line and move on with life. But I'm trying to decide why? Are there savings to be had running at a higher (or lower) pressure.
Obviously higher pressure = hotter.
Lower pressure = more btu / pound of steam.
No regulator = one less thing to break.
No regulator = additional hazard if something else breaks.
Time = probably the most important.
Utilization rate probably factors in. Are we running 10% uptime or 95% uptime?
I'm guessing lower pressure is cheaper.
Is it a problem worth solving? I'm thinking so.
The jacket is rated for 150 psig, and we have somewhere around 145 psig steam available. Historically we'd stick a 50 psi regulator in line and move on with life. But I'm trying to decide why? Are there savings to be had running at a higher (or lower) pressure.
Obviously higher pressure = hotter.
Lower pressure = more btu / pound of steam.
No regulator = one less thing to break.
No regulator = additional hazard if something else breaks.
Time = probably the most important.
Utilization rate probably factors in. Are we running 10% uptime or 95% uptime?
I'm guessing lower pressure is cheaper.
Is it a problem worth solving? I'm thinking so.