All that has been said concerning vertical
liquid-liquid exchangers, gas trapping, and the difficulties attached to their venting are entirely right. We still don't know what HT fluid is being used and whether the tube-side stream is boiling or not.
Speaking of gases, a fresh (thermally sound) mineral oil may have a vapour pressure of 14.7 psi at 600
oF!
Besides, lights or gases contained in the hot oil should be ventable from the system expansion tank or from system vents.
If you have gases as a result of thermal degradation of the hot hydrocarbon circulating oil, one should expect solids depositing on colder surfaces impairing the HT. That's one reason to check a sample with acetone in the lab. Besides, the HT fluid viscosity may change with time.
Of all thermo-physical properties of a liquid HT fluid, viscosity is the one affecting HE performances the most. HTC are inversely proportional to the viscosity to the 0.4 power. Viscosity may change in one single exchanger in as many as four times (as from 5 to 20 cP), thus the HTC can drop by a factor of 1.7 specially if the fluid is an aromatic-rich mineral oil.
One more point: when generalizing on gases having lower-than-liquid HT coefficients, one must remember that hydrogen gas films may show equal or better convection HT coefficients than liquid hydrocarbons especially at the temperatures (300
oC or more) encountered in hydrotreaters.
Hydrogen has a thermal conductivity more than 6.5 times higher than for air and 2.5 times higher than for liquid HC oils. Therefore, hydrogen-bearing liquid streams don't necessarily suffer from low HT convection coefficients at high temperatures. As a curiosity: air and nitrogen are also sometimes used as HT fluids, but they need extreme pressures to achieve good HT.
Aside from changing the HE altogether as suggested, it can be summarized:
1. Don't thermally crack the hot oil in the heater.
2. Vent safely uncondensibles and lights formed through the system expansion tank and other ("relatively cold"

vents in the circuit.
3. Filter a by-pass stream "in line".
4. Check the hot oil fluid in the lab regularly, taking representative samples.
5. Keep a back-pressure on the vertical "consumer" to avoid, as much as possible, the release of lights or uncondensibles.
6. At every overall maintenance shut down, clean the system from coke and deposits.
7. When starting up the vertical unit, and other parts of the hot oil circuit, vent any air, and drain any water, collected using cold oil flushing.
8. Start hot oil circulation gradually to minimize mechanical thermal stresses.
9. Remove leaks.
10. Follow safe "emergency" or "planned" shut-down procedures.
I hope I've been of help. Good luck !
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