Jump to content



Featured Articles

Check out the latest featured articles.

File Library

Check out the latest downloads available in the File Library.

New Article

Product Viscosity vs. Shear

Featured File

Vertical Tank Selection

New Blog Entry

Low Flow in Pipes- posted in Ankur's blog

0

Dry Cooler Vs Cooling Tower

dry cooler

2 replies to this topic
Share this topic:
| More

#1 Quimarah

Quimarah

    Junior Member

  • Members
  • 21 posts

Posted 10 September 2023 - 08:09 PM

Hello everyone! my question today is when is it better to choose a dry cooler instead of a cooling tower? (besides economic reasons)

Thanks in advance



#2 Pilesar

Pilesar

    Gold Member

  • Members
  • 1,386 posts

Posted 10 September 2023 - 08:45 PM

Economic reasons are the ultimate answer. Capital costs, infrastructure costs, maintenance costs should all be considered. Cooling towers and electric transformer capacity are both expensive. Cooling tower water temperature is usually lower than air cooling. Minerals in water are less soluble at higher temperatures so air cooling may avoid some fouling issues for higher temperature processes. Cooling tower water evaporates which can be a problem where water is scarce. Water can freeze in extreme cold environments. I worked on the design of a plant near the arctic where air was used for process cooling and these systems were even put inside a building to help heat the interior. 



#3 shvet1

shvet1

    Gold Member

  • Members
  • 350 posts

Posted 11 September 2023 - 12:21 AM

A: When no appropriate source of water is available.

 

In some cases it is uneconomical to treat water for cooling users requirements, e.g. if only salty water is available then it may be more economical to use steam condensate for circulation and raw water for evaporation.

 

A process engineer shall calculate money and compare options (1) treating of raw water and use it for circulation and evaporation both and (2) separating clean water for circulation and raw water for evaporation. The same for case where no external source of water at all, e.g. total reuse of water in plant.

 

No a simple answer. A feasibility study is recommended otherwise money are going to be spent inefficiently.






Similar Topics