ECD40
Mechanical
- Mar 4, 2014
- 42
Hello All,
I have a heat transfer problem of water flowing into and out of a large tank. This is an application on a mining project in northern Canada and how the issue impacts on the building HVAC design. We have a pipeline transporting 2,300 USgpm of mining waste in water from some distance. It discharges into a thickening tank where the solids are deposited. The clarified water then overflows the tank and is transported out of the building to another location. With such a throughput of fluid and a retention time of 200 minutes in the tank, the question has become what impact the passage of the water has on the heat load in the building. The attached sketch depicts the issue. In the winter, the incoming water is at 35 degrees F. I need to know the temperature of the outgoing water, so that the HVAC can be designed accordingly.
Can anyone help?
Thanks,
ECD40
I have a heat transfer problem of water flowing into and out of a large tank. This is an application on a mining project in northern Canada and how the issue impacts on the building HVAC design. We have a pipeline transporting 2,300 USgpm of mining waste in water from some distance. It discharges into a thickening tank where the solids are deposited. The clarified water then overflows the tank and is transported out of the building to another location. With such a throughput of fluid and a retention time of 200 minutes in the tank, the question has become what impact the passage of the water has on the heat load in the building. The attached sketch depicts the issue. In the winter, the incoming water is at 35 degrees F. I need to know the temperature of the outgoing water, so that the HVAC can be designed accordingly.
Can anyone help?
Thanks,
ECD40