plantprowler
Chemical
- Aug 10, 2013
- 136
I am planning a pilot scale reaction that is carried out in a large excess of H2O at 150 C in a single CSTR. Obviously, that CSTR operates under substantial autogenous pressure. A limpet coil provides the heat.
The part that confuses me is the mechanical design on the outlet side. Obviously, I must cool down below 100 C else the H2O will flash into steam on dropping P to 1 bara. So could I cool a pressured stream in a S&T HEX (say vs CW) & then reduce pressure to 0 barg?
What sort of device do I take the final pressure reduction over? A valve in a pipe? An orifice in a pipe? Something else?
Absolutely accurate pressure is *NOT* a concern. For testing purposes, can I use some sort of manual valve to do this?
The part that confuses me is the mechanical design on the outlet side. Obviously, I must cool down below 100 C else the H2O will flash into steam on dropping P to 1 bara. So could I cool a pressured stream in a S&T HEX (say vs CW) & then reduce pressure to 0 barg?
What sort of device do I take the final pressure reduction over? A valve in a pipe? An orifice in a pipe? Something else?
Absolutely accurate pressure is *NOT* a concern. For testing purposes, can I use some sort of manual valve to do this?