sshep
Chemical
- Feb 3, 2003
- 761
Description- We have difficulty getting heat into a vertical thermosyphon reboiler on a solvent recovery tower. The process side is aqueous saturated with oxygenated organic compounds. The operating pressure is 150 kPaa. Originally the exchanger was variable area with steam pressure at 2100 kPaa. This has since been revised to control steam flow- chest pressure indication is provided. When the problem manifests, the chest pressure can go to supply pressure with maximum exposed area and still no steam condenses- normally we keep max area exposed to minimize the required heat flux and keep tubewall temps low (to address film boiling theory). A direct steam injection below the tubesheet has been successful to get the thermosyphon started (and provide the main heat input if required), but the reboiler can later die again for no apparent reason. There are no obvious problems with the reboiler design (it has been checked many times by various engineers usually assuming water as the boiled medium), but we have 3 reboilers in this type service all struggling to various degrees. We think that the problem is related to composition of the column bottoms. This is a closed system with respect to water residue in the column bottoms (designed for make-up only). Taking a blowdown during problem periods seems to help, but external boiling tests of the same material do not indicate a problem with normal boiling (although the boiling is slightly more foamy than straight water).
Any ideas are appreciated.
Any ideas are appreciated.