leo31
Chemical
- May 17, 2024
- 9
Hi there, I went to a learning visit to a small plant where it was intended to use a chiller to cool down water used in a heat exchanger; from what I've gathered they had to stop using the refrigerant unit altogether as they switched their productions from continuous to little batch productions, resulting in having to turn off the unit multiple times per day causing the down below problem:
from what I understood during the shutting down phase the water sub cools as it has nothing to exchange heat with (as the batch has already ended and the heat exchanger is empty). This sub cooling effect makes the fluid unsuitable for the next batch and allegedly it's the reason why they are not using the unit anymore.
I was wondering if there’s some way to resolve this, they said they thought about using more water as the Q removed would be the same and since there’d be more flow the ΔT would have to be higher, resulting in less sub cooling. I was wondering if this could really be the answer, as they haven’t yet made any changes and the chiller remains unused.
from what I understood during the shutting down phase the water sub cools as it has nothing to exchange heat with (as the batch has already ended and the heat exchanger is empty). This sub cooling effect makes the fluid unsuitable for the next batch and allegedly it's the reason why they are not using the unit anymore.
I was wondering if there’s some way to resolve this, they said they thought about using more water as the Q removed would be the same and since there’d be more flow the ΔT would have to be higher, resulting in less sub cooling. I was wondering if this could really be the answer, as they haven’t yet made any changes and the chiller remains unused.