Week8 Shell&TubeHEPart2
Week8 Shell&TubeHEPart2
Week8 Shell&TubeHEPart2
Part 2
Lecturer:
1
Content
Tube Pitches
Materials
Basic Design
Kern Method
Bell-Delaware Method
Mechanical Design
Exercise
2
Learning Objective
Understanding of type of attachment of tube on
tube sheet, tube passes, and tube pitches
Understanding of materials of the heat exchanger
Understanding of basic design of the heat
exchanger
Able to apply Kern Method
Able to apply Bell-Delaware Method
Able to design shell-and-tube exchanger
3
Tube Pitches (Refer TEMA)
4
TEMA
5
Following parameters and constraint
for typical design
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Allocation of fluids
Put dirty stream on the tube side - easier to clean inside
the tubes
Put high pressure stream in the tubes to avoid thick,
expensive shell
When special materials required for one stream, put that
one in the tubes to avoid expensive shell
Cross flow gives higher coefficients than in plane tubes,
hence put fluid with lowest coefficient on the shell side
If no obvious benefit, try streams both ways and see
which gives best design
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Materials
Standard Designs
Shells
Shells – Steel, 304SS, 316SS, 304LSS, 316LSS up to 42-inch diameter
Bonnets/Channels
Bonnets/channels – Steel, 304SS, 3136SS, 304LSS, 316LSS, Cast
Iron, Cast Bronze, Ductile Iron.
Tubesheets
Tubesheets – Aluminum Bronze, 90/10 CuNi, Muntz, RNB, 304SS,
316SS, 304LSS, 316LSS Steel.
Tubes
Tubes – Carbon Steel, Stainless Steel, Nickel and Nickel Alloys,
Titanium and other Alloys. Bare and Lo-Fin Tubing.
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Materials (Custom Designs)
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Tube Materials
Materials selection and compatibility between construction
materials and working fluids are important issues, in particular
with regard to corrosion and/or operation at elevated
temperatures.
Requirement for low cost, light weight, high conductivity, and
good joining characteristics often leads to the selection of
aluminum for the heat transfer surface.
On the other side, stainless steel is used for food processing or
fluids that require corrosion resistance.
In general, one of the selection criteria for exchanger material
depends on the corrosiveness of the working fluid.
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Tube Wall Thickness
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Tube Outside Diameter
The most common plain tube sizes have 15.88,19.05, and
25.40 mm (5/8, ¾, 1 inch) tube outside diameters.
Smaller-diameter tubes yield higher heat transfer coefficients
and result in a more compact exchanger.
Larger-diameter tubes are easier to clean and more rugged.
The foregoing common sizes represent a compromise.
For mechanical cleaning, the smallest practical size is 19.05
mm.
For chemical cleaning, smaller sizes can be used provided
that the tubes never plug completely.
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Tube Length
Tube length affects the cost and operation of heat exchangers.
Longer the tube length (for any given surface area), fewer tubes are needed,
requiring less complicated header plate with fewer holes drilled, shell diameter
decreases resulting in lower cost
Typically tubes are employed in 8, 12, 15, and 20 foot lengths.
Mechanical cleaning is limited to tubes 20 feet and shorter, although standard
exchangers can be built with tubes up to 40 ft.
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Design
q UAT
Specific configuration, U can be evaluated and sum of fouling
resistance can be estimated.
D1 1 D1 D1 1 D1
RA RB ln
D2 U 2k w D2 hA hB D2
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Cont ’d
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Basic Mechanical Feature
Shell Type
Tube Bundle
Tube Diameter
Tube Length
Tube Layout and Pitch
Baffle Design
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Kern Method
Based on data from industrial heat transfer operations
and for fixed baffle cut of 25%, the equation was
provided as:
0.55 1/ 3 0.34
hDe De m s cp
0.36
k k s
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Bell-Delaware Method
A method with correction factors were introduced for
the following elements:
1. Leakage thought the gaps between the tube and the
baffles and the baffles and the shell, respectively.
2. Bypass of the flow around the gap between the tube
bundle and the shell.
3. Effect of the baffle configurations (i.e. recognition of
the fact that only a fraction of the tube are in pure
cross flow.
4. Effect of adverse temperature gradient on the heat
transfer in laminar flow.
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Bell-Delaware: Heat Transfer Calculation
Reynolds number is defined
Vmax Do
Re
Vmax is defined as the maximum velocity between the tubes near
the centerline of the flow.
Vmax is given by
m T
Vmax
S m
ho hc J C J L J B
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Bell-Delaware: Cont’d (Correction factor)
J c 0.55 0.72 Fc
1 2( Ds 2 Lc ) 1 Ds 2 Lc D 2 Lc
Fc sin cos 2 cos 1 s
DOTL DOTL D
OTL
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Bell-Delaware: Cont’d
( Ds DOTL ) LB
Fbp
Sm
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Pressure Drop Calculation
pc N c K 1
f 2 Vmax 2
Pressure drop across the shell is given by
N cw
ps ( N 1)pc RB Npw RL 2pc RB 1
Nc
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Hydraulic Analysis for Shell-Side
The shell-side fluid experiences a pressure drop as it passes through
the exchanger, over the tubes, and around the baffles.
If the shell fluid nozzles (inlet and outlet ports) are on the same side of
the heat exchanger, then the shell-side fluid makes an even number of
the tube bundle crossings, but if they are on opposite sides, then it
makes an odd number of the bundle crossings.
The number of bundle crossings therefore influences the pressure
drop.
Based on experiments, the pressure drop experienced by the shell-
side fluid is calculated by
Where,
Gs : Shell side mass velocity
N b : Number of baffles
0.14
b
s : Variable property correction.
w
f s : Shell side friction factor
Roadmap to Increase Heat Transfer
Increase heat transfer coefficient
Tube Side
Increase number of tubes
Decrease tube outside diameter
Shell Side
Decrease the baffle spacing
Decrease baffle cut
Increase surface area
Increase tube length
Increase shell diameter à increased number of tubes
Employ multiple shells in series or parallel
Increase LMTD correction factor and heat exchanger
effectiveness
Use counter flow configuration
Use multiple shell configuration
Roadmap to Reduce Pressure Drop
Tube side
Decrease number of tube passes
Increase tube diameter
Decrease tube length and increase shell diameter and number
of tubes
Shell side
Increase the baffle cut
Increase the baffle spacing
Increase tube pitch
Use double or triple segmental baffles
Rating and Design
Use the kern method to calculate the shell side heat transfer coefficient and pressure drop for flow
of a light hydrocarbon with the following specifications (at bulk temperature)
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Example 2
Hot oil at 100oC is used to heat air in a shell and tube heat
exchanger. The oil makes 6 tube passes and the air makes 1 shell
pass. 2.0 kg/s of air (specific heat of 1009 J/kgoC) is to be heated
from 20 to 80oC. The specific heat of the oil is 2100 J/kgoC and its
flow rate is 3.0 kg/s. Calculate the area required.
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Example 3
Design debutaniser overhead condenser with using the
following operation and condition data
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Rule of Thumb on Costing
Price increases strongly with shell diameter/number of tubes
because of shell thickness and tube/tube-sheet fixing
Price increases little with tube length
Hence, long thin exchangers are usually best
Consider two exchangers with the same area: fixed tubesheet, 30
bar both side, carbon steel, area 6060 ft2 (564 m2), 3/4 in (19 mm)
tubes
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Shell Thickness
t
Ds p p
t
p is the gauge pressure in the shell
t is the shell wall thickness
is the stress in the shell
From a force balance
pDs
2t pDs hence t
2
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Typical Maximum Exchanger Sizes
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Fouling Consideration
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Flow-Induced Vibration
Two types - Resonance and Instability
Resonance occurs when the natural frequency coincides with a
resonant frequency
Fluid elastic instability
Both depend on span length and velocity
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Avoiding Vibration
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Avoiding vibration (Cont’d)
Intermediate baffles
Windows
with no tubes Tubes
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Shell-Side Enhancement
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Low-finned Tubes
Flat end to go into tube sheet and intermediate flat portions
for baffle locations
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Tube-side Enhancement using Inserts
Spiral wound wire and twisted tape
Increase tube side heat transfer coefficient but at the cost of
larger pressure drop (although exchanger can be
reconfigured to allow for higher pressure drop)
In some circumstances, they can significantly reduce fouling.
In others they may make things worse
Can be retrofitted
43 Twisted tape
Wire-wound Inserts (HiTRAN)
Both mixes the core (radial mixing) and breaks up the
boundary layer
Available in range of wire densities for different duties
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Problems of Conventional Shell & Tube
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Conventional Shell-side Flow
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Shell-Side Axial Flow
Some problems can be overcome by having axial flow
Good heat transfer per unit pressure drop but
for a given duty may get very long thin units
problems in supporting the tube
RODbaffles (Phillips petroleum)
introduced to avoid vibrations by providing additional
support for the tubes
also found other advantages
low pressure drop
low fouling and easy to clean
high thermal effectiveness
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RODbaffles
Tend to be about 10% more expensive for the same shell
diameter
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Twisted tube (Brown Fintube)
Tubes support each other
Used for single phase and condensing duties in the power,
chemical and pulp and paper industries
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Shell-side Helical Flow (ABB Lummus)
Independently developed by two groups in Norway and Czech
Republic
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Comparison of Shell side Geometries
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Example 6: Double-Pipe Heat Exchanger including Pressure Drop
Seawater at 30oC flows on the inside of a 25-mm I.D. steel tube with a 0.8-mm
wall thickness at a flow rate of 0.4 kg/s. The tube forms the inside of a
double-pipe heat exchanger. Engine oil (refined lubricating oil) at 100oC
flows in the annular space with a flow rate of 0.1 kg/s. The outlet
temperature of the coil is 60oC. The material is carbon steel. The I.D. of the
outer tube is 45 mm and the I.D. and O.D. of the inner tube are 25 and 27
mm, respectively.
Calculate:
a. Heat transfer coefficient in the annulus.
b. Heat transfer coefficient inside the tube.
c. Overall heat transfer coefficient with fouling.
d. Area of the heat exchanger, and by assuming the length of a hairpin to be 4 m,
the number of hairpin.
e. Pressure drops and pumping power for both streams.
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Hairpin Heat Exchanger
The chemical processing industry commonly uses hairpin heat
exchangers
Hairpins are typically rated at 500 psig shell side and 500 psig tube
side
Fins can be added to the internal tube’s external wall to increase
heat transfer
Hairpin Heat Exchanger
A hairpin design is often more thermally efficient than a traditional shell and
tube, which results in a lower up-front cost and lower overall weight.
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