JohnWeal
Mechanical
- Dec 16, 2012
- 124
Good evening
We have a requirement to put water at 70 deg C into the annulus of a concentric tube in tube heat exchanger (construction is 2 streams of 7 tubes which are each 6m long)
This is to heat digester sludge from 36 to 39 deg C.
The calculated mass flow rate is 24 kg/s for the maximum heat exchanger rating of 1005 kW.
The 1005 kw rating is of course sized for the extreme conditions which are a rare event. For this project it is ambient temperature of -10 deg C and a raw sludge feed temperature of 5 deg C.
Therefore, less kW are required in anything warmer than this and the control of the mass flow rate through a 3 way valve is th client specification.
I jave seen numerous circuits and numerous 3-way valve piping arrangements.
1) which is most advantageous, a diverter valve or mixer valve? I’m thinking a mixer valve keeps the same mass flow rate but varies the temperature and the diverter valve has the constant temperature but varies the mass flow rate.
What is generally the preferred way to control the heat transfer for sludge heating applications?
Best regards
John
We have a requirement to put water at 70 deg C into the annulus of a concentric tube in tube heat exchanger (construction is 2 streams of 7 tubes which are each 6m long)
This is to heat digester sludge from 36 to 39 deg C.
The calculated mass flow rate is 24 kg/s for the maximum heat exchanger rating of 1005 kW.
The 1005 kw rating is of course sized for the extreme conditions which are a rare event. For this project it is ambient temperature of -10 deg C and a raw sludge feed temperature of 5 deg C.
Therefore, less kW are required in anything warmer than this and the control of the mass flow rate through a 3 way valve is th client specification.
I jave seen numerous circuits and numerous 3-way valve piping arrangements.
1) which is most advantageous, a diverter valve or mixer valve? I’m thinking a mixer valve keeps the same mass flow rate but varies the temperature and the diverter valve has the constant temperature but varies the mass flow rate.
What is generally the preferred way to control the heat transfer for sludge heating applications?
Best regards
John