cooling condensate and bubbling vapours through condensate
I was considering what material to use to make a shell and tube heat exchanger, like the one Excalibur has made. I figured because standard stainless steel has poor heat transfer properties it would not be the material of choice, and that carbon steel would be better. If you were to use carbon steel, and water to cool the condensate, you would also need to give consideration to water treatment, as for a boiler, to prevent corrosion and other related issues. I expect making the heat exchanger larger and using oil to cool it would require less maintenance. But what about if the feedstock is not pre-heated and you have water in it - will that lead to corrosion in the carbon steel heat exchanger? Any oxygen in the water in the feedstock will pass through the system first, followed by water, followed by hydrocarbons. Perhaps the pipes will not have time to rust before they are coated in hydrocarbon?? I understand there is little to no oxygen content in water above a certain temperature but if you start from ambient temperature then the oxygen has to pass through the system at some point. Does it present a problem?
Does anyone have any experience / feedback on this? I expect the condition of pipes running from vessel to vessel will be in the same condition as pipes in a heat exchanger.
Has anyone tried running bubbles up through the condensing vessel? I am interested to know what kind of extra pressure it creates.
Thanks
Col
Originally posted by Beyond Biodiesel
View Post
Does anyone have any experience / feedback on this? I expect the condition of pipes running from vessel to vessel will be in the same condition as pipes in a heat exchanger.
Has anyone tried running bubbles up through the condensing vessel? I am interested to know what kind of extra pressure it creates.
Thanks
Col
Comment