vladrath
Chemical
- Jan 29, 2014
- 23
I'm a little stuck. I have been looking into this and find all the issues associated with a small approach temperature on an exchanger.
Conditions: I have a BEU heat exchanger acting as an overhead condenser. I have an organic vapor entering the shell at 430°F and distillate leaving the exchganger at 350°F. The exchanger is cooled with water on the tube side entering at 85°F and leaveing at 87°F.
I've already identified that we do not have sufficient cooling water flow at the exchanger. So I'm working on fixing that (Control valve issues).
What I am really wondering about is whether cooling water is the right cooling medium for this condenser. It seems to me that we have a large approach temperature. Perhaps we are plating out solids from our water supply and in addition to low CW flow we might have fouled up the exchanger?
In my past experience we've used oil as the condenser cooling fluid for hotter services.
The reason that this is important to me is that we're losing vapor to the enivornmental device (buring product instead of capturing it).
Conditions: I have a BEU heat exchanger acting as an overhead condenser. I have an organic vapor entering the shell at 430°F and distillate leaving the exchganger at 350°F. The exchanger is cooled with water on the tube side entering at 85°F and leaveing at 87°F.
I've already identified that we do not have sufficient cooling water flow at the exchanger. So I'm working on fixing that (Control valve issues).
What I am really wondering about is whether cooling water is the right cooling medium for this condenser. It seems to me that we have a large approach temperature. Perhaps we are plating out solids from our water supply and in addition to low CW flow we might have fouled up the exchanger?
In my past experience we've used oil as the condenser cooling fluid for hotter services.
The reason that this is important to me is that we're losing vapor to the enivornmental device (buring product instead of capturing it).