seasar
Mechanical
- Mar 4, 2008
- 62
All,
I would appreciate any ideas or thoughts you may have regarding a phenomenon I am experiencing.
A large vessel with 6,000 gallons of a water/grain mixture (a mash cooker) has a steam coil supplied with 20,000 lbs/hr and the supply valves is ~ 30% open.
The vessel starts at 170 degrees with the intent of inducing a boil...at just over 200F the steam flowrate drops off drastically (down to 10,000 lbs/hr) while the supply valve opens to 100% attempting to make setpoint.
The pressure in the vessel is 14.7 psia.
The weird part is that this only occurs when using grains from the 2007 crop year. Can there be something in the fluid mixture that suddenly changes the heat transfer across the coil? There is no burnt residue on the coil when the vessel is emptied.
I would appreciate any ideas or thoughts you may have regarding a phenomenon I am experiencing.
A large vessel with 6,000 gallons of a water/grain mixture (a mash cooker) has a steam coil supplied with 20,000 lbs/hr and the supply valves is ~ 30% open.
The vessel starts at 170 degrees with the intent of inducing a boil...at just over 200F the steam flowrate drops off drastically (down to 10,000 lbs/hr) while the supply valve opens to 100% attempting to make setpoint.
The pressure in the vessel is 14.7 psia.
The weird part is that this only occurs when using grains from the 2007 crop year. Can there be something in the fluid mixture that suddenly changes the heat transfer across the coil? There is no burnt residue on the coil when the vessel is emptied.