How can we optimize water consumption for cooling steel in industrial processes?

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Optimizing water consumption for cooling steel in industrial processes involves understanding the heat transfer dynamics between the steel and the cooling water. Increasing water pressure alone may not reduce water consumption, as it could lead to higher flow rates and increased water use. Effective strategies include recirculating water to minimize waste and redesigning hollow castings to enhance contact time between water and steel for better heat absorption. The primary challenge lies in the heat transfer efficiency of the rollers, suggesting that a mechanical or process engineer's expertise may be necessary for significant improvements. Addressing water consumption in this context is crucial, especially if large volumes are being wasted.
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Consider that you are cooling a mass of steel from 1,000 °C to 920 °C. To accomplish this a water flow of 2,000 liters/min is required, and the water outlet temperature increases 10 °C. The water pressure at the inlet is 5 kg/cm2.

Now suppose that you increase 30% the water pressure by means of a booster pump.

Is this going to result in less water consumption for the same drop in the temperature of the steel?
 
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How is the steel being cooled by the water?
 
This sounds sort of like homework, but it is pretty vague. It can't really be answered without more information about the cooling/control method.
 
This thread is not homework. Sorry for the delay in answering.

The steel bar is very long because of the rolling; and has a round cross section. To cool it the bar
travels across a set of hollow castings placed one after the other. The castings have water chambers,
provided with many holes so that the water fills the chambers, and with the water pressure a shower
takes place, with water getting in contact with the steel, in such a way that the steel bar is cooled.
 
That does help; So this is a real-world situation.

It appears to me that the primary limiting factor is going to be the heat transfer between the rollers and the product; a 10C rise in water temperature is not much considering just how hot the steel is, so the method of cooling is keeping heat from easily getting to the water.

Now that isn't to say you can't impact it by changing the water parameters, but changing the pressure is an odd parameter to pick. It seems like you meant increasing the flow by increasing the pressure, but then you asked if it would reduce water consumption, which seems like a contradiction. And even then, "consumption" is an odd choice of words here, as I would think the water is being re-circulated to make the actual "consumption" very small. So again, some more details about the water supply system would be useful.

Just an outside guess about the configuration, but if you are using once-through water from a tap and you use a pump to boost the pressure on a system with no controls, you will see an increase in flow, an almost proportional decrease in delta-T and a very small decrease in the temperature of the steel.
 
OK Russ. Now you are helping me to clarify things. You wrote: "...but changing the pressure is an odd parameter to pick..." I agree 100% with this point. Increasing pressure won´t help. So I see 3 options:
1) Increase water flow. But this goes in the opposite way; will increase water consumption.
2) Find a way to recirculate the water. At this moment I don´t know how.
3) Redesign the hollow castings in such a way that water could be in contact with steel for a greater time and so take more heat away, and then reducing water consumption. Again, at this point I don´t know how to accomplish this.
 
capterdi said:
2) Find a way to recirculate the water. At this moment I don´t know how.
That requires a pump, a cooling tower and a mechanical engineer to design it for you. It isn't something that can be done here.
3) Redesign the hollow castings in such a way that water could be in contact with steel for a greater time and so take more heat away, and then reducing water consumption. Again, at this point I don´t know how to accomplish this.
If you just reduce the water flow by closing a valve partway, the delta-T will go up proportionally without affecting the cooling capability much.

And I don't think the water is the heat transfer bottleneck: its the way the rollers touch the steel that limits heat flow. A mechanical or process engineer would probably be needed. If you are spending a lot of money dumping water down a drain, it is probably worthwhile to put dome serious effort into the investigation.
 
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