sshep
Chemical
- Feb 3, 2003
- 761
Friends,
All the plants at the site where I work have atmospheric condensate collection drums. The flash steam from the drum is condensed by either a CW exchanger, or a fin fan. Neither type of system seems to work particularly well as evidenced by steady flash steam plumes. One of these CW based flash condensers is planned for replacement with an alternative (as yet to be determined).
Does anyone have any recommendations or resources for best practice? For example I wonder if a direct contact system might be better- i.e. circulate water through a cooler and spray back into the atmospheric vent, properly designed of course. This would avoid the high tube wall temps that cause CW scaling.
Any help is appreciated,
sshep
All the plants at the site where I work have atmospheric condensate collection drums. The flash steam from the drum is condensed by either a CW exchanger, or a fin fan. Neither type of system seems to work particularly well as evidenced by steady flash steam plumes. One of these CW based flash condensers is planned for replacement with an alternative (as yet to be determined).
Does anyone have any recommendations or resources for best practice? For example I wonder if a direct contact system might be better- i.e. circulate water through a cooler and spray back into the atmospheric vent, properly designed of course. This would avoid the high tube wall temps that cause CW scaling.
Any help is appreciated,
sshep