Title: The Family of Shell and Tube Heat Exchangers
1The Family of Shell and Tube Heat Exchangers
- P M V Subbarao
- Professor
- Mechanical Engineering Department
- I I T Delhi
Family members with Simple Geometrical Features
for Complex Fluid Flow.
2Fixed tube sheet
3U-Tube STHE
4Floating Head STHE TEMA S
5Floating Head STHE TEMA T
6Cross Baffles
- Baffles serve two purposes
- Divert (direct) the flow across the bundle to Wet
the the maximum tube surface area. - Support the tubes for structural rigidity,
preventing tube vibration and sagging. - When the tube bundle employs baffles,
- The heat transfer coefficient is higher than the
coefficient for undisturbed flow around tubes
without baffles. - For a baffled heat exchanger the higher heat
transfer coefficients result from the increased
turbulence. - the velocity of fluid fluctuates because of the
constricted area between adjacent tubes across
the bundle. - This also leads to developing flow for ever.
7Avoid Developed Flow
8Types of Baffle Plates Segmental Cut Baffles
- The single and double segmental baffles are most
frequently used. - They divert the flow most effectively across the
tubes. - The baffle spacing must be chosen with care.
- Optimal baffle spacing is somewhere between 40 -
60 of the shell diameter. - Baffle cut of 25-35 is usually recommended.
9Types of Baffle Plates
The triple segmental baffles are used for low
pressure applications.
10Types of Baffle Plates
11Types of Baffle Plates
Disc and ring baffles are composed of alternating
outer rings and inner discs, which direct the
flow radially across the tube field. The
potential bundle-to-shell bypass stream is
eliminated This baffle type is very effective
in pressure drop to heat transfer conversion
12Types of Baffle Plates
In an orifice baffle shell-side-fluid flows
through the clearance between tube outside
diameter and baffle-hole diameter.
13Thermal Analysis of Heat Exchanger
- Known as heat exchanger specification problems
and their solutions. - These are rating, design, and selection.
14Rating Analysis
- The rating problem is evaluating the
thermo-hydraulic performance of a fully specified
exchanger. - The rating program determines
- the heat transfer rate and the fluid outlet
temperatures for prescribed fluid flow rates,
inlet temperatures, and - the pressure drop for an existing heat exchanger
- therefore the heat transfer surface area and the
flow passage dimensions are available.
15The Rating Analysis
16The Design (Sizing) Analysis
- Design is the process of determining all
essential constructional dimensions of an
exchanger that must perform a given heat duty and
respect limitations on shell-side and tube-side
pressure drop. - In the Design (sizing) Analysis,
- An appropriate heat exchanger type is selected.
- The size to meet the specified hot and cold fluid
inlet and outlet temperatures, flow rates, and
pressure drop requirements, is determined. - Constraints
- Minimum or maximum flow velocities,
- Size and/or weight limitations,
- Ease of cleaning and maintenance, erosion, tube
vibration, and thermal expansion. - Each design problem has a number of potential
solutions, but only one will have the best
combination of characteristics and cost.
17Basic Design Procedure
18Basic Design Procedure
- Heat exchanger must satisfy the Heat transfer
requirements (design or process needs) - Allowable pressure drop (pumping capacity and
cost) - Steps in designing a heat exchanger can be listed
as - Identify the problem
- Select an heat exchanger type
- Calculate/Select initial design
- parameters
- Rate the initial design
- Calculate thermal performance and pressure drops
for shell and tube side. - Evaluate the design.
- Is performance and cost acceptable?
19The Selection Analysis
- Selection means choosing a heat exchanger from
among a number of units already existing. - Typically, these are standard units listed in
catalogs of various manufacturers. - Sufficient manufacturers data usually exist to
allow one to select comfortably oversized
exchanger with respect to both area and pressure
drop.