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Heat Exchanger Tubes - Minimum Thickness


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#1 Bill B

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Posted 10 February 2009 - 08:34 AM

I am designing a heat exchanger and needing to estimate the minimum tube thickness (A-213 tubes, 304L). Using the Barlow equation, at 1200 psi / 450°F design, and an allowable stress of 13,200 psi, I have estimated the min thickness to be .033", plus any allowance for erosion.

Is there a rule of thumb I should use? We are processing syn gas through the tubes, CW on shell.

#2 djack77494

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Posted 10 February 2009 - 09:58 AM

Normal practice is to have NO erosion/corrosion allowance on heat exchanger tubes. This would be even more true for stainless steel tubes.

#3 Bill B

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Posted 11 February 2009 - 06:12 AM

QUOTE (djack77494 @ Feb 10 2009, 09:58 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Normal practice is to have NO erosion/corrosion allowance on heat exchanger tubes. This would be even more true for stainless steel tubes.

Thanks for the input. I will proceed with no allowance. I will try to come up with vibration analysis equations and check my "minimum" tube thickness vs. that number. Bill

#4 kuldeepd

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Posted 31 March 2009 - 03:49 AM

http://www.processca..._Exchanger.aspx

hope this helps.

regards
KD




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