lastone
Chemical
- Jul 14, 2003
- 48
I have a question about how one of the condensers in my unit is arranged. Every U-tube or two-pass exchanger in condensing service, with cooling water in the tubes, that I have seen is arranged with the water inlet on the bottom and the tubeside inlet and outlet nozzles are directly in the center of the channel head. Also, the baffle in the channel head runs in the horizontal plane.
The condenser I looked at today is a U-tube, but the baffle in the channel head is in the vertical position, and the inlet nozzle is on the bottom right side with the outlet nozzle opposite on the top left side. I believe the TEMA designation is BEU. The question I have, is if this is a common configuration for a condenser bundle. I know that AEU and BEU exchangers are very common, but the front head baffle in the vertical? The overhead vapor from the distillation column enters the top of the shell at the opposite end and the condensed liquid exits the bottom of the shell at the end near the water inlet.
The exchanger operates as a flooded condenser. The condensed process liquid outlet is throttled by a control valve, which manipulates the level of condensed liquid in the shell. This is the pressure control for the column. There is also a pressure equalization line running from the column overhead line to the overhead accumulator, which ensures the liquid in the condenser shell will gravity drain to the accumulator.
Wouldn't rotating the bundle 90 deg from the horizontal give a less than optimal temperature approach? Or does it not matter since the condenser is flooded. Would the vertical orientation be chosen so that the shell fluid sees an average of the cool and warm water? Would it be possible that with the tubes mounted in this configuration that some of the tubes in the inlet pass do not run liquid full?
I am asking these questions because I have been experiencing a very strange and difficult problem which I have not been able to solve. Every 12 minutes, and you can set a clock by it, the column overhead pressure takes an initial dip (0.3 psi), and then simultaneously my reflux flow cuts in half, the overhead temperature and pressure spikes, my overhead accumulator temperature increases from 95 to 150 deg, the overhead accumulator level increases 15-20%, and the suction pressure on the distillate/reflux pump drops to 0. Actually all of the temperatures in the column spike a small amount, the column pressure drop jumps up a little, (0.5 delta psi increase), and then just 30 seconds later everything returns to normal.
I have zeroed all of the flowmeters on the column and checked all the valves. They are accurate and operating correctly. I have checked in the column, everything is in good shape - all the distributors are level, packing looks good, nothing stuck where it shouldn't be. The reflux, feed, and reboiler nozzles are all clear and functioning properly. The reboiler and overhead condenser are clean as a whistle and no leaks. We have run every controller associated with the column in manual, and it still happens. We have checked the seal on the tops pump and it is in good shape. We have checked the piping from the condenser to the accumulator and its control valve, and it is clear. The accumulator is clear and clean. The equalization line is clear. I have modeled the column in ASPEN using the number of design stages and current operating conditions and the model matches and predicts the steady state conditions. The lab data also matches with the model. I also have used the pack rating feature in ASPEN, which uses the specific packing vendor pressure drop and HETP correlations. At the current operating conditions it says the column is operating at 63-67% of maximum fractional capacity in all of the packed sections. The predicted pressure drops are pretty close to the actual as well. But I don't know how to model for the blip. The column is separating a fairly small amount of C2 and C3 alcohol from a water stream. The distillate rate is about 1250 lb/hr and the bottoms rate is around 25000 lb/hr. The overheads contain about 15% water. I'm not trying to make a perfect separation. Actually I can't.
I know this post is extremely long, and my main question is still concerning the condenser, but if anybody has any ideas of other things we should look at I would really appreciate it. I hate not being able to figure this out.
The condenser I looked at today is a U-tube, but the baffle in the channel head is in the vertical position, and the inlet nozzle is on the bottom right side with the outlet nozzle opposite on the top left side. I believe the TEMA designation is BEU. The question I have, is if this is a common configuration for a condenser bundle. I know that AEU and BEU exchangers are very common, but the front head baffle in the vertical? The overhead vapor from the distillation column enters the top of the shell at the opposite end and the condensed liquid exits the bottom of the shell at the end near the water inlet.
The exchanger operates as a flooded condenser. The condensed process liquid outlet is throttled by a control valve, which manipulates the level of condensed liquid in the shell. This is the pressure control for the column. There is also a pressure equalization line running from the column overhead line to the overhead accumulator, which ensures the liquid in the condenser shell will gravity drain to the accumulator.
Wouldn't rotating the bundle 90 deg from the horizontal give a less than optimal temperature approach? Or does it not matter since the condenser is flooded. Would the vertical orientation be chosen so that the shell fluid sees an average of the cool and warm water? Would it be possible that with the tubes mounted in this configuration that some of the tubes in the inlet pass do not run liquid full?
I am asking these questions because I have been experiencing a very strange and difficult problem which I have not been able to solve. Every 12 minutes, and you can set a clock by it, the column overhead pressure takes an initial dip (0.3 psi), and then simultaneously my reflux flow cuts in half, the overhead temperature and pressure spikes, my overhead accumulator temperature increases from 95 to 150 deg, the overhead accumulator level increases 15-20%, and the suction pressure on the distillate/reflux pump drops to 0. Actually all of the temperatures in the column spike a small amount, the column pressure drop jumps up a little, (0.5 delta psi increase), and then just 30 seconds later everything returns to normal.
I have zeroed all of the flowmeters on the column and checked all the valves. They are accurate and operating correctly. I have checked in the column, everything is in good shape - all the distributors are level, packing looks good, nothing stuck where it shouldn't be. The reflux, feed, and reboiler nozzles are all clear and functioning properly. The reboiler and overhead condenser are clean as a whistle and no leaks. We have run every controller associated with the column in manual, and it still happens. We have checked the seal on the tops pump and it is in good shape. We have checked the piping from the condenser to the accumulator and its control valve, and it is clear. The accumulator is clear and clean. The equalization line is clear. I have modeled the column in ASPEN using the number of design stages and current operating conditions and the model matches and predicts the steady state conditions. The lab data also matches with the model. I also have used the pack rating feature in ASPEN, which uses the specific packing vendor pressure drop and HETP correlations. At the current operating conditions it says the column is operating at 63-67% of maximum fractional capacity in all of the packed sections. The predicted pressure drops are pretty close to the actual as well. But I don't know how to model for the blip. The column is separating a fairly small amount of C2 and C3 alcohol from a water stream. The distillate rate is about 1250 lb/hr and the bottoms rate is around 25000 lb/hr. The overheads contain about 15% water. I'm not trying to make a perfect separation. Actually I can't.
I know this post is extremely long, and my main question is still concerning the condenser, but if anybody has any ideas of other things we should look at I would really appreciate it. I hate not being able to figure this out.