Matador
Mechanical
- May 31, 2001
- 51
I have a question concerning control valve sizing (pressure drop assumptions) for a heat exchanger. It comes down to what pressure drop do you assume. The HX manufacturer says they don't size valves. Here is what I think should be done.
(1) - Determine the condensate loading and the pressure required to evacuate the condensate.
(2) - With this information take the maximum pressure drop possible across the valve. (ie supply press = 150 psi, required pressure for condensate removal = 10 psi, therefore the pressure drop at rated flow should be 140 psi)
(3) - I think this is important because it minimizes the valve size and a large pressure drop allows the condensate line to be sized smaller becuase there is less flashing & 2 phase flow.
I'm thinking that a smaller pressure drop (ie 15 psi) would pressurize the heat exchanger shell to 135 psi. To evacuate the condensate to an atmospheric tank would require ~ 4" line compared to something smaller if the shell pressure was reduced.
On the other hand, there could be a problem with vlave life by taking such a large pressure drop across the valve.
Feedback requested!
(1) - Determine the condensate loading and the pressure required to evacuate the condensate.
(2) - With this information take the maximum pressure drop possible across the valve. (ie supply press = 150 psi, required pressure for condensate removal = 10 psi, therefore the pressure drop at rated flow should be 140 psi)
(3) - I think this is important because it minimizes the valve size and a large pressure drop allows the condensate line to be sized smaller becuase there is less flashing & 2 phase flow.
I'm thinking that a smaller pressure drop (ie 15 psi) would pressurize the heat exchanger shell to 135 psi. To evacuate the condensate to an atmospheric tank would require ~ 4" line compared to something smaller if the shell pressure was reduced.
On the other hand, there could be a problem with vlave life by taking such a large pressure drop across the valve.
Feedback requested!