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4.4. Shell-And-Tube Heat Exchangers 2022

This document discusses the design of shell-and-tube heat exchangers. It covers the main TEMA classes and types of shell-and-tube heat exchangers. Key design parameters discussed include baffle spacing, baffle cut, and modifications that can be made to the baffle design to reduce pressure drop. Guidelines are provided for fluid allocation, velocity constraints, temperature constraints, and pressure drop constraints. Design considerations for condensers, reboilers, and vaporizers are also summarized.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
38 views29 pages

4.4. Shell-And-Tube Heat Exchangers 2022

This document discusses the design of shell-and-tube heat exchangers. It covers the main TEMA classes and types of shell-and-tube heat exchangers. Key design parameters discussed include baffle spacing, baffle cut, and modifications that can be made to the baffle design to reduce pressure drop. Guidelines are provided for fluid allocation, velocity constraints, temperature constraints, and pressure drop constraints. Design considerations for condensers, reboilers, and vaporizers are also summarized.

Uploaded by

ziphatheesona242
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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4.4.

Shell-and-tube heat
exchangers
This section covers shell-and-tube heat exchangers in more detail.
Types of shell-and-tube heat exchanger
• Common standards are promulgated by TEMA
(tubular exchanger manufacturers’ association)
• 3 main TEMA classes
• R = severe duties (petroleum refineries)
• C = moderate duty (commercial use)
• B = chemical process industries
• TEMA types
• 3-letter code defined as
• FRONT END – SHELL TYPE – REAR END
e.g.
BEM = bonnet head at front end – one shell pass –
fixed tube sheet like B at the rear end
AEM = channel with removable cover at front end –
one shell pass – fixed tube sheet B at the rear end
Tubes come in standard sizes → 19 mm is a
good preliminary choice most of the time
Tube sheets have standard patterns (Pt is the tube
pitch = distance between the centres of tubes)

Triangular Square

Rotated
square/
diamond
Shell design
• Shell diameter should be a tight fit to the tube bundle to prevent fluid
flow from bypassing the tubes → poor heat transfer!
• Baffles are used to direct flow
BAFFLING
Types of Baffles
Segmental baffles Rod baffles

6
Baffle spacing
• Centre line to centre line distance between baffles.
• Most vital parameter in STHE design.
• TEMA standards: minimum baffle spacing - 1/5 of shell ID or 2”;
whichever is greater.
• Sometimes baffle spacing of 0.2 – 1 (shell ID) is used.
• Closer spacing – poor bundle penetration by shell-side fluid, difficulty
in mechanical cleaning. But higher HTC and higher pressure drop.
• Small baffle spacing – poor stream distribution.

7
Baffle spacing(contd)
• Maximum baffle spacing = shell ID.
• Larger baffle spacing - longitudinal flow will predominate, less
efficient than cross flow, large unsupported tube spans - HX
prone to tube failure
• Optimum baffle spacing:
o Turbulent flow on shell side Re > 1000, HTC varies to power 0.6 –
0.7 of velocity, but pressure drop varies to the power 1.7 – 2.
o Laminar flow Re < 100, exponents are 0.33 for HTC and 1.0 for
pressure drop.
o As baffle space is reduced, pressure drop increases at a much
faster rate than does the HTC. Optimum ratio of baffle spacing to
shell ID– usually between 0.3 & 0.6.

8
Baffle cut
Baffle cut Baffle cut orientation

9
8.3 Baffle cut (contd)

• Expressed as % of shell-side ID.


• Important parameter for STHE design
• Varies from 15 – 45% of shell ID.
• Very small and very large baffle cuts - detrimental to efficient heat
transfer on the shell-side.

10
Effect of small and large baffle cuts

11
Baffle cut (contd)

• Use baffle cuts of 20% - 35%.


• Baffle cuts < 20% (increase the shell-side HTC) or > 35% (decrease shell-
side pressure drop) - poor designs.
• Change other aspects of tube bundle geometry e.g. double segmented
baffles, divided flow shell or cross-flow shell may be used to reduce the
shell-side pressure drop.
• Single phase fluids on the shell-side - horizontal baffle cut recommended -
minimises accumulation of deposits on the bottom of the shell.
• Two-pass shell – TEMA F - vertical cut - ease of fabrication and bundle
assembly.

12
Reducing pressure drop by modifying baffle design

• Single-pass shell (TEMA E) and single-segmental baffles


• Shell-side pressure drop too high with single-segmental baffles in a single
pass shell, despite increasing baffle spacing and baffle cut -highest
recommended values.
• Occurs when shell-side flow rate is very high or when the shell-side fluid is a
low pressure gas. Consider using the double-segmental baffle

13
Reducing pressure drop by modifying
baffle design (contd)
• Single-pass shell and double-segmental baffles
• Change single segmental to double segmental baffles at the same
spacing, all other aspects identical.
• Cross-flow velocity - reduced +/- half because shell-side flow divided
into two parallel streams.
• Big reduction in cross-flow pressure drop.
• Reduction in shell-side HTC, but considerably less than reduction in
pressure drop.

14
Reducing pressure drop by modifying
baffle design (contd)
• Divided-flow shell (TEMA J) and single-segmental baffles
• If allowable shell-side pressure drop cannot be satisfied even with double
segmental baffles at a relatively large spacing, consider divided-flow shell
with single-segmental baffles.
• Pressure drop - proportional to v2 and distance travelled.
• Divided flow shell +/- 1/8 (pressure drop) of identical single-pass exchanger.
• Divided-flow shell - even larger pressure reduction than the double-
segmental baffles.
• Disadvantage - added cost of additional piping required.

15
Heat and mass transfer analogy
Pressure difference is the driving force for mass flow

↕ANALOGY↕

Temperature difference is the driving force for heat flow


Mean temperature difference
• For pure counter-current or co-current flow:
∆Tm = ∆TLM = (∆T1 – ∆T2) / ln (∆T1 / ∆T2)
∆Ti = temperature difference at point i on the heat exchanger; for counter-current
flow; e.g.
∆T1 = T1 – t2 = hot fluid inlet T – cold fluid outlet T
• Generally, however, ∆Tm = F × ∆TLM → F = correction factor accounting for heat
exchanger geometry
• F is typically correlated as a function of two difference dimensionless
temperature ratios:
F = f(R,S)
R = (T1 – T2) / (t2 – t1)
S = (t2 – t1) / (T1 – t1)
Example: F for 1 shell pass and 2 or more
even numbered tube passes
Fluid allocation (no phase change)
• Corrosion → corrosive fluid in tubes
• Fouling → fouling fluid in tubes
• Temperature → hot fluid in tubes
• Operating pressure → high pressure fluid in tubes
• Pressure drop
• For equal ∆Ps, the higher U is obtained in the tubes
• The fluid with the lower allowable ∆P must go in the tubes → related to pumping
requirements and mechanical design
• Viscosity
• For turbulent flow, the more viscous (higher μ) fluid must be in the shell
• If turbulence is not guaranteed → place the viscous fluid in the tubes due to UNCERTAINTIES
in empirical correlations for film coefficients
• Flow rates → lower flow rate in the shell
Velocity constraints
• Fluid velocities
• Liquids
• 1-2 m/s for the tube side (except for water → 1.5-2.5 m/s)
• 0.3-1.0 m/s for the shell side
• Vapours/gases
• Vacuum pressure → 50-70 m/s
• Atmospheric pressure → 10-30 m/s
• High pressure 5-10 m/s
Temperature constraints
• Note: temperature differences occur at BOTH ends of a heat
exchanger
• Maximum ∆T ≥ 20 oC
• Minimum ∆T
• 5-7 oC for coolers with cooling water
• 3-5 oC for coolers with brine
• Maximum temperature rise for cooling water should be 30 oC
• For heat recovery between process streams, ∆T > 20 oC
Pressure drop constraints
• Liquids
• For μ < 1 mPa.s → ∆P ≈ 35 kPa
• For μ = 1-10 mPa.s → ∆P = 50-70 kPa
• Vapours/gases
• High vacuum pressure → ∆P = 0.4-0.8 kPa
• Medium vacuum pressure → ∆P = 0.1×Pabsolute
• 1-2 bar → ∆P = 0.5×Pgauge
• Greater than 10 bar → ∆P = 0.1×Pgauge
Condensers
• Basic configuration is similar to other shell-and-tube heat exchangers BUT with
wider baffle spacing (≈ shell diameter)
• 4 arrangements:
• Horizontal with shell-side condensation
• Horizontal with tube-side condensation
• Vertical with shell-side condensation
• Vertical with tube-side condensation
• Film-wise condensation is the normal mechanism
• Horizontal shell-side and vertical tube-side are most commonly used
• Film coefficients for condensation are typically correlated in terms of the vapour
and liquid densities and the liquid viscosity and thermal conductivity
• De-superheating = cooling from T > Tsat down to Tsat
• Sub-cooling = cooling from Tsat down to T < Tsat
Condensation of mixtures
• Total condensation = all components condense
• Typically, however, only some components in a mixture may actually
condense
• Condensation from a non-condensable gas is also possible (e.g. water
from air) → cooler-condensers are used
• Differential condensation = liquid separations from the uncondensed
vapour
• Integral condensation = vapour and liquid are in equilibrium
Reboilers and vaporizers
Thermosiphon:
Most economical
Forced Not for high viscosity or
circulation: high vacuum P
Suitable for high Hydrostatic head need
viscosity, fouling, Vapour/liquid desnity
low vaporization differences drives fluid
rates, low flow
vacuum P
Pumping = added
costs

Kettle:
No vapour/ liquid
disengagement needed
Not for fouling fluids
Low U and high cost
Forced circulation reboiler design
• Calculate U assuming only convection
• Throttle valve at the outlet → liquid flashes as the pressure drops
going into the vapour/liquid disengagement vessel
• One shell pass + 2 tube passes → shell side vaporization
• One shell pass + 1 tube pass → tube side vaporization
• Velocity should be 3-9 m/s to reduce fouling
Thermosiphon reboiler design
• Calculate the vaporization rate mvap using the duty
• Assume U and calculate A → then set the layout (good starting point for many applications is
length = 2.44 m and tube diameter = 25 mm)
• Assume a circulation rate through the exchanger
• Calculate ∆P at the inlet (in the liquid phase)
• Calculate ∆P section-by-section up the exchanger (vapour/liquid phase mixture)
• Calculate ∆P at the outlet (vapour/liquid mixture)
• Calculate total ∆P by adding up ∆P for all of the sections and compare with available head → if it
is not balanced, go back to step 3
• Calculate h and Q, section-by-section up the tubes and calculate Qtotal by adding up the sections
• Calculate mvap from Qtotal and compare with mvap from step 1 → if they are not close, go back to
step 2 and use a new layout
• Check that the CRITICAL HEAT FLUX is NOT exceeded anywhere along the heat exchanger
• Optimize by trying to reduce the area (since cost is typically proportional to the area)
Kettle reboiler design
• Tube pitch = 1.5-2.0 times the outer diameter of the tubes to avoid
vapour blanketing → inefficient heat transfer
• Maximum vapour velocity (at the liquid surface) = 0.2 [(ρL – ρV) / ρV]0.5
• For a single component + steam → isothermal conditions (Tsteamsat =
Tfluidsat)
• For non-isothermal cases → MUST use ∆TLM
Costs of shell-and-tube heat exchangers
Equipment Units for sizing (S) Slower Supper a b n
U-tube shell-and-tube Area in m2 10.0 1,000 10,000 88 1.0
Floating head shell-and-tube Area in m2 10.0 1,000 11,000 115 1.0
Thermosiphon Area in m2 10.0 500 13,000 95 1.0
U-tube kettle Area in m2 10.0 500 14,000 83 1.0
Horizontal carbon steel pressure Mass in kg 250.0 69,200 -2,500 200 0.6
vessel
Horizontal stainless steel pressure Mass in kg 170.0 114,000 -15,000 560 0.6
vessel
Vertical carbon steel pressure vessel Mass in kg 150.0 69,200 -400 230 0.6
Vertical stainless steel pressure vessel Mass in kg 90.0 124,00 -10,000 600 0.6
Purchased equipment cost = a + b Sn

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