ProjEngKLS
Mechanical
- Sep 6, 2002
- 21
I have an application for a single pass (both shell side and tube side) heat exchanger. This ia a low temperature (-70 °C shell, -25 °C tube) application primarily concerned with heat removal resulting from a chemical reactor in a batch process.
I would like to orient the exchanger vertically with tube side flow into the top and out the bottom. Shell side flow is to be counter-current. I expect a dT of -2 °C on the tube side and +10 °C on the shell side.
I have been told that horizontal orientation is better than vertical for heat transfer. This does not make any sense to me. I'd think the difference between horizontal and vertical should be negligible, and in the case of this application (with the dTs the way they are) vertical might be slightly better.
Anyone with thoughts on this?
thanks
I would like to orient the exchanger vertically with tube side flow into the top and out the bottom. Shell side flow is to be counter-current. I expect a dT of -2 °C on the tube side and +10 °C on the shell side.
I have been told that horizontal orientation is better than vertical for heat transfer. This does not make any sense to me. I'd think the difference between horizontal and vertical should be negligible, and in the case of this application (with the dTs the way they are) vertical might be slightly better.
Anyone with thoughts on this?
thanks