SirAdam
Mechanical
- Sep 18, 2024
- 3
Hi All,
New in post to a heat exchanger company; where there's no other engineer to discuss/demonstrate. I come from pressure vessel background, though i've been in other industry [machine design] for several years so in need of a refresher!
Case in point; I'm to run through HTRI thermal software to establish a clients proposed tube length is fit/unfit.
provided information
Tube flow [3710 Nm3/hr] 93% o2, 5% Ar, 2% N2
inlet temp 148c
outlet temp 50.3c
inlet pressure 3.03 bara
pressure drop 6.9kpa
fouling resistance - 0.0005 ft2-hr-F/BT
design pressure 10 bar
design temp 200c
Shell side
propylene glycol 40/60 with water
inlet 42C
outlet -
inlet pressure 3 bara
pressure drop 69kpa
fouling 0.0005
design pressure 10 barg
design temp 93C
I'm correct in saying I cannot convert the Nm3/hr into Kg/S without specific volume or density of gas?
I'm correct in saying I either need to understand the required outlet temp OR available duty, to calculate the remaining factors?
Cheers, any tips appreciated.
New in post to a heat exchanger company; where there's no other engineer to discuss/demonstrate. I come from pressure vessel background, though i've been in other industry [machine design] for several years so in need of a refresher!
Case in point; I'm to run through HTRI thermal software to establish a clients proposed tube length is fit/unfit.
provided information
Tube flow [3710 Nm3/hr] 93% o2, 5% Ar, 2% N2
inlet temp 148c
outlet temp 50.3c
inlet pressure 3.03 bara
pressure drop 6.9kpa
fouling resistance - 0.0005 ft2-hr-F/BT
design pressure 10 bar
design temp 200c
Shell side
propylene glycol 40/60 with water
inlet 42C
outlet -
inlet pressure 3 bara
pressure drop 69kpa
fouling 0.0005
design pressure 10 barg
design temp 93C
I'm correct in saying I cannot convert the Nm3/hr into Kg/S without specific volume or density of gas?
I'm correct in saying I either need to understand the required outlet temp OR available duty, to calculate the remaining factors?
Cheers, any tips appreciated.