cwc1
Mechanical
- Mar 20, 2012
- 2
I am interested in how others are determining the shell and tube temperatures for the expansion joint analysis for vertical fixed-tubesheet thermosiphons, especially for the cold startup case in which the heating medium (steam) is introduced rapidly into the shell. In this case, the column sump and the reboiler tubes are full of subcooled (ambient) liquid. We have thermal analysis software that can produce a steady-state analysis including shell and tube Mean Metal Temps (MMTs), but the program expects that the fluid will be saturated at the free surface in the sump, and so it reassigns the temperature to equate to saturated conditions. If one simply assigns the tube temperature to equal the cold process temperature inside the tubes, it seems that the result could be a large degree of conservativism, since the tube temperature will actually be somewhere in between the stream temperatures. Then there is the time-dependent nature of the problem, with no circulation in the tubes initially, but then increasing circulation along with changing heat transfer conditions that would tend to shift the tube temperature more in favor of the tubeside fluid, so the worst case may not be at the instant the steam is applied. What approaches have been used or would be recommended? Has anyone done a full-blown CFD/FEA, and can any generalizations be made as to how the quick, cold startup case tends to compare to the operating cases in its severity? Thanks.