ankur2061;
most of the time designer is not equipped with limited skin temp then only option we have is to follow rule of thumbs as mentioned by kkala; velocity between 3 fps to 10 fps.
Majster
usually the shell side pressure drop is already determined by client, the fluid will flow to another process later with the required inlet pressure. if i'm not wrong, there is one normal practise engineering always do is to have pressure drop at 10% of the inlet pressure.
Further notes on the matter are as follows.
1. While v>3 ft/s (practically 1 m/s) is widely recognized for tubes, it is less recognized for the shell. For instance, local colleagues say they do not find a low limit for shell velocity in their practices/ standards. But this is supported by N. Lieberman and seems quite reasonable.
By the way the thread "Liquid velocity in tubular heat exchangers" by kkala in this forum (most recent post 21 Mar 2010) covers some matters of the present thread.
2. The condition v>3 ft/s seems also to make the risk of low skin temperature remote, as explained in N. Lieberman's book for a fuel oil case.
3. Much depends on local conditions concerning scales. We have looked into several operating local exchangers, cooling desalter brine. Hot brine (more scaling) is always in the tubes, usually with v> 3 ft/s. Cold water is in the cell with v=0.3-0.8 m/s.
4. Usually allowable frictional ΔP in the exchanger is a fixed value according to practices here (e.g. 0.7 bar for liquids, both in tubes or shell; some higher ΔP can be specified for viscus liquids).
Edited by kkala, 18 April 2010 - 03:41 AM.