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Heat exchangers transfer heat from a hot to a cold fluid and can be classified as direct contact or surface types. Surface-type exchangers keep fluids separate by a physical barrier and transfer heat through the barrier. Tube-type surface exchangers have many configurations and use sliding arrangements to accommodate thermal expansion, with triangular, square, or rotated-square patterns of tubes. Thermal design of tube-type exchangers considers parallel or counterflow configurations and uses the log mean temperature difference and heat transfer equation.
Heat exchangers transfer heat from a hot to a cold fluid and can be classified as direct contact or surface types. Surface-type exchangers keep fluids separate by a physical barrier and transfer heat through the barrier. Tube-type surface exchangers have many configurations and use sliding arrangements to accommodate thermal expansion, with triangular, square, or rotated-square patterns of tubes. Thermal design of tube-type exchangers considers parallel or counterflow configurations and uses the log mean temperature difference and heat transfer equation.
Heat exchangers transfer heat from a hot to a cold fluid and can be classified as direct contact or surface types. Surface-type exchangers keep fluids separate by a physical barrier and transfer heat through the barrier. Tube-type surface exchangers have many configurations and use sliding arrangements to accommodate thermal expansion, with triangular, square, or rotated-square patterns of tubes. Thermal design of tube-type exchangers considers parallel or counterflow configurations and uses the log mean temperature difference and heat transfer equation.
The basic definition of a heat exchanger is a device that transfers heat from a hot to a cold fluid. They are used extensively in process plants and are given specific names when they serve a special purpose, e.g. superheaters, evaporators, condensers, deaerators, etc., may all be classified as heat exchangers. For design purposes, heat exchangers can be broadly classified into direct contact and surface types. Figures 3.17 and 3.18 show the principles and the general extent of temperature changes associated with each type.
3.5.1 Contact-type exchangers
Contact-type exchangers are used mainly in steam systems where either steam is used as a contact heating medium or water is used as a cooling (i.e. attemporation or desuperheating) medium. The entire exchanger vessel is normally built to pressure equipment standards.
3.5.2 Surface-type exchangers
In surface-type exchangers, the two process fluids are kept separate by a physical barrier. Heat is transferred from the warm fluid through the barrier to the cold fluid. The two basic arrangements are the tube type and the plate type. The design of tube-type heat exchangers is covered extensively by the TEMA (Tubular Exchanger Manufacturers Association, USA) technical standards and European standards such as EN 247. Many configurations are available, divided broadly into head and shell types (see Fig. 3.19). Thermal expansion is accommodated by various types of sliding arrangements (Fig. 3.20). Tube-type exchangers show various different design arrangements for the way that the tubes are distributed in the tubeplate. Figure 3.21 shows the three most common the triangular, square, and rotated-square patterns. Figure 3.22 shows an exploded view of a typical tube-type exchanger.
3.5.3 Thermal design
From a thermal viewpoint, tube-type heat exchangers can be classified broadly into parallel and counterflow types. The thermal driving force is the parameter known as Log Mean Temperature Difference (LMTD). For the parallel flow configuration (see Fig. 3.17).