sider
Mechanical
- Nov 26, 2021
- 43
Hi all,
would need some advice on the low-loss header application. Currently, I am designing a chilled water test ramp with rented equipment. The chilled water system will be with the primary-secondary pumping arrangement. When the load comes online, I have sufficient liters of water as per the chiller manufacturer's recommendation.
I would like to use a 4-pipe buffer tank that I have on my hands (connections DN125, 2000 L, vertical, Height 2,4 m, D approx 1,4 m) as a low-loss header between primary and secondary circuits, while my piping around it is DN200 (velocity of water around 1 m/s).
Can I have higher inlet velocities on my buffer tank (low-loss header)inlets? I believe the velocity is important when low-loss headers with smaller volumes are used, but could that be in my case?
I am afraid to mess up with the stratification inside the tank, but I believe when I match loads on primary and secondary circuits that shouldn't be a problem?
would need some advice on the low-loss header application. Currently, I am designing a chilled water test ramp with rented equipment. The chilled water system will be with the primary-secondary pumping arrangement. When the load comes online, I have sufficient liters of water as per the chiller manufacturer's recommendation.
I would like to use a 4-pipe buffer tank that I have on my hands (connections DN125, 2000 L, vertical, Height 2,4 m, D approx 1,4 m) as a low-loss header between primary and secondary circuits, while my piping around it is DN200 (velocity of water around 1 m/s).
Can I have higher inlet velocities on my buffer tank (low-loss header)inlets? I believe the velocity is important when low-loss headers with smaller volumes are used, but could that be in my case?
I am afraid to mess up with the stratification inside the tank, but I believe when I match loads on primary and secondary circuits that shouldn't be a problem?