gne77
Mechanical
- Jul 7, 2008
- 6
I came across an interesting problem with a jacketed tank recently hoping for some perspective on this - the company who built them vanished long ago.
The tank is 2000 gallons and presumably was a dairy bulk tank. The jacket has (3) 2" pipe inlets along the side of the tank (all one above the other), and one on the tank bottom, opposite side of the rest. There is (1) 2" outlet at the bottom of the tank (jacket) and (1) 1" outlet (again in the jacket). A common manifold feeds all (4) of the jacket supply locations it's inlet is slightly above the top of the tank. Another manifold drains the (2) outlets.
The owner likes to connect 100 PSI steam to the jacket (I questioned the safety of this and was given a shrug) from up top at the inlet manifold. Now they want to connect cooling water to the jacket instead of steam, I suggested connecting from the 'drain' manifold to ensure the entire jacket is filled with cooling water. We made a test run and recorded the flow rate. Just for kicks we also connected from the top of the 'supply' manifold and recorded the flow rate. The flow rate when feeding from the bottom of the tank was twice what we saw when feeding from the top. The same pump was used obviously.
So it seems that the water is finding a shortcut when feeding from the bottom, and despite the fact that we have an additional 10 feet of static head to exit out the top the head pressure is less than half.
Based on this description does anyone have a guess of what is going on inside the tank jacket? I have to assume that this tank has at most 2 zones, the owner thinks only 1 zone despite all of the connections. The only ideas I can come up with all lead to the tank having a lot of stagnant flow areas in the jacket and are probably wrong. The tank is also insulated so feeling for cold areas from the outside is a no-go. Nobody has been lowered into the tank for lack of having proper safety in place.
The tank is 2000 gallons and presumably was a dairy bulk tank. The jacket has (3) 2" pipe inlets along the side of the tank (all one above the other), and one on the tank bottom, opposite side of the rest. There is (1) 2" outlet at the bottom of the tank (jacket) and (1) 1" outlet (again in the jacket). A common manifold feeds all (4) of the jacket supply locations it's inlet is slightly above the top of the tank. Another manifold drains the (2) outlets.
The owner likes to connect 100 PSI steam to the jacket (I questioned the safety of this and was given a shrug) from up top at the inlet manifold. Now they want to connect cooling water to the jacket instead of steam, I suggested connecting from the 'drain' manifold to ensure the entire jacket is filled with cooling water. We made a test run and recorded the flow rate. Just for kicks we also connected from the top of the 'supply' manifold and recorded the flow rate. The flow rate when feeding from the bottom of the tank was twice what we saw when feeding from the top. The same pump was used obviously.
So it seems that the water is finding a shortcut when feeding from the bottom, and despite the fact that we have an additional 10 feet of static head to exit out the top the head pressure is less than half.
Based on this description does anyone have a guess of what is going on inside the tank jacket? I have to assume that this tank has at most 2 zones, the owner thinks only 1 zone despite all of the connections. The only ideas I can come up with all lead to the tank having a lot of stagnant flow areas in the jacket and are probably wrong. The tank is also insulated so feeling for cold areas from the outside is a no-go. Nobody has been lowered into the tank for lack of having proper safety in place.