wilfully12
Petroleum
- Jun 25, 2008
- 16
All
I have a problem with cooling water flow, and am getting confused as to how the system works hydraulically.
I have a high flow seawater pump (7000 m3/hr) cooling a steam turbine condenser. The Pump is mounted in a caisson approx 30m below process deck. The condenser is mounted at around 15m above the process deck. Sea level provides suction head and this is normally around 20m.
So the pump is pumping seawater to the condenser mounted around 45m above the pump, water outlet is above the condenser again. In this way the inlet pipe of the condesner will always be flooded. At the high point is a vent / siphon breaker before the water flows back down to sealevel (once through cooling system) through a 36" pipe.
The flowrates result in a Froude number of >0.7, higher than that recommended for self venting flow. The question is: What will happen here? I expect that during normal flow conditions the pressure will sit on the vent (i.e. atm pressure) and during a break in flow air will be sucked in by the vacuum generated. Would air be entrained during normal operation from the vent? On what criteria do I need to design the vent for? Essentially I am not sure how this system is going to operate on the plant.
Any assistance on gravity flow or siphon breakers appreciated
Regards
I have a problem with cooling water flow, and am getting confused as to how the system works hydraulically.
I have a high flow seawater pump (7000 m3/hr) cooling a steam turbine condenser. The Pump is mounted in a caisson approx 30m below process deck. The condenser is mounted at around 15m above the process deck. Sea level provides suction head and this is normally around 20m.
So the pump is pumping seawater to the condenser mounted around 45m above the pump, water outlet is above the condenser again. In this way the inlet pipe of the condesner will always be flooded. At the high point is a vent / siphon breaker before the water flows back down to sealevel (once through cooling system) through a 36" pipe.
The flowrates result in a Froude number of >0.7, higher than that recommended for self venting flow. The question is: What will happen here? I expect that during normal flow conditions the pressure will sit on the vent (i.e. atm pressure) and during a break in flow air will be sucked in by the vacuum generated. Would air be entrained during normal operation from the vent? On what criteria do I need to design the vent for? Essentially I am not sure how this system is going to operate on the plant.
Any assistance on gravity flow or siphon breakers appreciated
Regards