Calculating Heat Exchange Requirements for Ethanol Condenser

In summary, the conversation is about a question regarding a shell-and-tube heat exchanger acting as a condenser. The task is to determine the number of tubes required, the overall heat transfer coefficient, and the effectiveness of the heat exchanger. The necessary information and assumptions are provided, and the conversation involves discussing the correct values and equations to use in order to accurately solve the problem.
  • #1
OMANII_93
5
0

Homework Statement


Hi,
I need someone to help me with this question. I tried to find the answer for two weeks I could not finde it. Anyone with the required experience can help! I will be so grateful.

Question:

A shell-and-tube heat exchanger is to act as a condenser: saturated ethyl alcohol (ethanol) vapour at pressure of 1 atm is to be condensed on the shell side and cooling water will be used in the tubes. U-tubes will be used (giving two passes on the tube-side). They will be steel, with a total length (end-to-end of a U-tube) of 6m, 15 mm inside diameter and 17.5 mm outside diameter. Thermal conductivity of steel can be taken as 50 W/m/K.

It is required to condense a maximum vapour flow of 5000 kg/h with no sub-cooling of the condensate. Cooling water is available with a maximum summer temperature of 25°C and with the temperature-rise (DT) limited to 30°C. A search of the literature shows that a heat transfer coefficient of around 5000 W/m2/K can be expected on the shell side for condensing ethanol. Fouling factors on the inner and outer tube surfaces may be assumed to be 0.0001 m2×K/W and 0.0002 m2×K/W respectively.

Determine the number of tubes required, the overall heat transfer coefficient and the effectiveness of the heat exchanger.

Fluid properties may be evaluated at mean fluid temperature. Other assumptions made must be fully justified.

Homework Equations



They are in my attempted solution

The Attempt at a Solution



My answer is attached as an image[/B]
 

Attachments

  • 20161107_195223.jpg
    20161107_195223.jpg
    34.3 KB · Views: 398
  • 20161107_195235.jpg
    20161107_195235.jpg
    38.7 KB · Views: 464
Last edited by a moderator:
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
It would help if you added units to your calculations. If you think you can condense more than 1 kg/s of ethanol with 0.01 kg/s of water it must ring all alarm bells...
 
  • #3
BvU said:
It would help if you added units to your calculations. If you think you can condense more than 1 kg/s of ethanol with 0.01 kg/s of water it must ring all alarm bells...
Yes I know but I have not coz I think my answer is wrong :(. If you have any idea only on how can i get the number of tubs I will be able to solve the rest!
 
  • #4
Your heat capacity for water is 1000 x too high. It should be 4.2. Also, I looked up the heat of vaporization of ethanol at its atmospheric boiling point of 78.4 C, and it is 841 kJ/kg.
 
  • #5
Chestermiller said:
Your heat capacity for water is 1000 x too high. It should be 4.2. Also, I looked up the heat of vaporization of ethanol at its atmospheric boiling point of 78.4 C, and it is 841 kJ/kg.
I but Cp.w = 4.3 in my answer. So now can I assume that the in temperature of the ethanol as 78.4?
I do not really know I am doing wrong and what I am doing right.
 
  • #6
$$\dot{Q}=(1.389)(841)=1168\ kJ/sec$$
$$\dot{w}=\frac{1168}{(4.184)(30)}=9.31\ kg/sec$$

The atmospheric boiling point of ethanol is 78.4 C. Didn't you look that up? How can you get the log-mean temperature difference without knowing the ethanol temperature?
 
  • #7
Chestermiller said:
$$\dot{Q}=(1.389)(841)=1168\ kJ/sec$$
$$\dot{w}=\frac{1168}{(4.184)(30)}=9.31\ kg/sec$$

The atmospheric boiling point of ethanol is 78.4 C. Didn't you look that up? How can you get the log-mean temperature difference without knowing the ethanol temperature?
Chestermiller said:
$$\dot{Q}=(1.389)(841)=1168\ kJ/sec$$
$$\dot{w}=\frac{1168}{(4.184)(30)}=9.31\ kg/sec$$

The atmospheric boiling point of ethanol is 78.4 C. Didn't you look that up? How can you get the log-mean temperature difference without knowing the ethanol temperature?

20161108_192017.jpg

Can You see this is the number of tubes correct?

And about the log-mean temperature difference, I thought I will not use it coz I do not have exit temperature of the ethanol and I can not put any temperature from my head!
 
  • #8
OMANII_93 said:
View attachment 108650
Can You see this is the number of tubes correct?
No. If you didn't take into account the ethanol temperature, you could not have gotten the number of tubes correct. And you didn't even calculate the required heat transfer area.
And about the log-mean temperature difference, I thought I will not use it coz I do not have exit temperature of the ethanol and I can not put any temperature from my head!
If the ethanol enters the shell as a saturated vapor at 1 atm., what is its temperature? If it exits the shell as a saturated liquid at the same pressure, how much has its temperature changed? So what is its exit temperature? What is the temperature difference between the water and the ethanol at the water inlet to the heat exchanger? What is the temperature difference between the water and the ethanol at the water exit from the heat exchanger?
 
  • #9
Chestermiller said:
No. If you didn't take into account the ethanol temperature, you could not have gotten the number of tubes correct. And you didn't even calculate the required heat transfer area.

If the ethanol enters the shell as a saturated vapor at 1 atm., what is its temperature? If it exits the shell as a saturated liquid at the same pressure, how much has its temperature changed? So what is its exit temperature? What is the temperature difference between the water and the ethanol at the water inlet to the heat exchanger? What is the temperature difference between the water and the ethanol at the water exit from the heat exchanger?
I am really grateful for the help you gave me I will try to solve it again and I will send you my work tomorrow to check if they are right. Can You please tell me which equation to use to get the required heat transfer area , the number of tubes and what is the name of the table to get the final temperature of the ethanol. So I can follow what you give me. Thanks a lot.
 
  • #10
The final temperature of the ethanol is the same as the inlet temperature, 78.4 C. Its temperature doesn't change when it condenses at constant pressure.

Getting the number of tubes is going to be a trial-and-error procedure. You are going to have to guess a number of tubes, and then calculate the heat transfer for anyone of the tubes, given the flow rate, heat load, and temperature differences. Start out by assuming, say, 10 tubes. Calculate the Reynolds number for each tube. Calculate the internal Nussult number for each tube. Get the internal heat transfer coefficient. Get the overall heat transfer coefficient. Etc.
 

1. How is heat exchange requirement calculated for an ethanol condenser?

The heat exchange requirement for an ethanol condenser is calculated using the formula Q = m * Cp * deltaT, where Q is the heat exchange requirement in Joules, m is the mass flow rate of the ethanol in kg/s, Cp is the specific heat capacity of ethanol in J/kg*K, and deltaT is the temperature difference between the inlet and outlet of the condenser in Kelvin.

2. What is the specific heat capacity of ethanol?

The specific heat capacity of ethanol is 2.44 J/g*K at 25 degrees Celsius. This value may vary slightly depending on the temperature and purity of the ethanol.

3. How does the mass flow rate of ethanol affect the heat exchange requirement?

The mass flow rate of ethanol directly affects the heat exchange requirement. As the mass flow rate increases, the heat exchange requirement also increases. This is because more heat is needed to raise the temperature of a larger amount of ethanol.

4. Why is the temperature difference between the inlet and outlet important in calculating heat exchange requirement?

The temperature difference between the inlet and outlet is important because it represents the amount of heat that needs to be removed from the ethanol in order to condense it. The larger the temperature difference, the more heat exchange is needed.

5. Can the heat exchange requirement for an ethanol condenser be reduced?

Yes, the heat exchange requirement for an ethanol condenser can be reduced by increasing the efficiency of the condenser through design changes or by using a heat exchanger. Additionally, using a higher purity ethanol can also reduce the heat exchange requirement as impurities have a higher specific heat capacity and require more heat to be removed.

Similar threads

  • Engineering and Comp Sci Homework Help
Replies
22
Views
1K
  • Materials and Chemical Engineering
Replies
6
Views
374
  • Engineering and Comp Sci Homework Help
Replies
1
Views
1K
  • Engineering and Comp Sci Homework Help
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • Engineering and Comp Sci Homework Help
Replies
6
Views
2K
  • Engineering and Comp Sci Homework Help
Replies
12
Views
3K
  • Materials and Chemical Engineering
Replies
10
Views
2K
  • Engineering and Comp Sci Homework Help
Replies
1
Views
3K
Replies
78
Views
3K
  • Engineering and Comp Sci Homework Help
Replies
6
Views
2K
Back
Top