092961
Mechanical
- Aug 5, 2004
- 11
I've got a system with a 7000 gal 316SS tank in a closed loop with 120 feet of 12 inch diameter 316SS piping. The system is located inside with ambient air temperature of 60 F. The water is heated in a separate heating tank to 110 F. The process cycle involves filling the 7000 gal tank with 110 F water, then circulating in the piping loop at a velocity of 8 ft/sec. The process runs for 1 hour with no additional heating, but the process must remain above 95 F for the entire hour. The circulation pump has a 30 Hp motor operating at about 90% efficiency. I have calculated the heat input from the pump to be 72531 BTU/hr. I've looked at the 3E Plus software (mentioned on this site) and found that with Bare stainless steel pipe, 12 inches in diameter, no wind, etc. the loss is 280 BTU/hr/ft. This tells me that I have a net heat INPUT to the system of 38931 BTU/hr. Unless I missed it, I didn't see anything in the manual about the 3E software calculating combined heat loss of convection and radiation, however the inputs imply that it does.
(1) Can someone who uses the software regularly confirm that it calculates the heat loss from both convection and radiation.
(2) If I ignore the addition of energy from the pump, I calculate a temperature drop over the course of 1 hour of less than 1 degree F. I am using the equation q=m(dot) x cp x dT and the heat loss from the program.
(3) If I ignore the addition of energy from the pump, my calculations indicate that my temperature drop over the course of an hour is less than 1 F. Can someone confirm that for me and let me know if this is because of the volume of fluid in the system and the heat capacity of that volume of fluid? If I am off, perhaps someone can point out the equation I SHOULD be using.
(4) If I wanted to manually calculate the BTU/hr loss, it looks like a convoluted process of Nusselt and Prandlt numbers based on the fluid and the Reynolds number. Any helpful hints on this approach?
I should know this but it's been a while since heat transfer and I would like reassurance that my approach is acceptable and I don't like using a canned program without being able to confirm it…at least get myself in the ballpark.
Thanks to whomever responds.
(1) Can someone who uses the software regularly confirm that it calculates the heat loss from both convection and radiation.
(2) If I ignore the addition of energy from the pump, I calculate a temperature drop over the course of 1 hour of less than 1 degree F. I am using the equation q=m(dot) x cp x dT and the heat loss from the program.
(3) If I ignore the addition of energy from the pump, my calculations indicate that my temperature drop over the course of an hour is less than 1 F. Can someone confirm that for me and let me know if this is because of the volume of fluid in the system and the heat capacity of that volume of fluid? If I am off, perhaps someone can point out the equation I SHOULD be using.
(4) If I wanted to manually calculate the BTU/hr loss, it looks like a convoluted process of Nusselt and Prandlt numbers based on the fluid and the Reynolds number. Any helpful hints on this approach?
I should know this but it's been a while since heat transfer and I would like reassurance that my approach is acceptable and I don't like using a canned program without being able to confirm it…at least get myself in the ballpark.
Thanks to whomever responds.