renier
Chemical
- Apr 16, 2003
- 5
I have come accross a reboiler design that I am not familiar with on one of our plants where we have a severe water hammer on the condensate side of the reboiler. This reboiler is installed horizontally with the column bottoms circulating on the shell side and the steam going through the tubes (2 passes). There is not a steam trap on the reboiler's condensate outlet but rather a hydraulic loop to maintain the condensate seal. The condensate line is experiencing severe water hammer (Some supports have broken). The condensate drum is under pressure control with steam and condensate injected on the vapor space to control the pressure.
I would like to hear from someone familiar with this type of reboiler w.r.t the rationale behind the design and what the correct piping configuration on the condensate piping should be (which I suspect to be source of the problem in our case i.e. vapor pockets). I am still in the process of getting hold of the original designer and hope that he will be able to solve the problem for us, but I am hoping that someone has experienced the exact problem and has actually solved it satisfactorily. I would also like to hear if there are potential interim measures I can take to solve the problem to allow us to run to the scheduled shutdown.
I would like to hear from someone familiar with this type of reboiler w.r.t the rationale behind the design and what the correct piping configuration on the condensate piping should be (which I suspect to be source of the problem in our case i.e. vapor pockets). I am still in the process of getting hold of the original designer and hope that he will be able to solve the problem for us, but I am hoping that someone has experienced the exact problem and has actually solved it satisfactorily. I would also like to hear if there are potential interim measures I can take to solve the problem to allow us to run to the scheduled shutdown.