xlr8shun
Mechanical
- Jul 26, 2021
- 4
Hello, I am trying to design a tube-in-tube heat exchanger that is capable of cooling a 200 bar supercritical steam line from 500 deg C to 40 C, using building utility water as the cooling fluid in the outer tube. I would like to design the exchanger so that the cooling fluid outlet temperature does not exceed 40 C. The first concern I have is that with the hot fluid inlet temperature exceeding the boiling point of the building water, flashing/boiling could occur making the heat transfer performance of the heat exchanger difficult to predict.
I have come across closed-form heat exchanger analysis such as found in the link below, however those solutions rely on the assumption of a constant specific heat value, and from what I can tell would not take into account the heat exchanged due to phase change in bringing the hot fluid from 500 to 40 C.
I am hoping someone can point me in the right direction in terms of a resource or approach that would be applicable to this specific scenario, either as a closed-form solution or suggestion for an iterative approach using changes in thermodynamics properties (e.g. enthalpy)
I have come across closed-form heat exchanger analysis such as found in the link below, however those solutions rely on the assumption of a constant specific heat value, and from what I can tell would not take into account the heat exchanged due to phase change in bringing the hot fluid from 500 to 40 C.
I am hoping someone can point me in the right direction in terms of a resource or approach that would be applicable to this specific scenario, either as a closed-form solution or suggestion for an iterative approach using changes in thermodynamics properties (e.g. enthalpy)