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a United States patent application Ayub (2003) has disclosed
a flooded evaporator with various types of enhanced tubes
along the bundle height. It has been observed that enhanced
surface tubes cause high vapor generation which could become
so intense that it causes high vapor-rich zone in the upper
section of a tube bundle as shown in Fig. 1. Higher void fraction
is not desirable since it starves the tubes of liquid refrigerant
and in turn affects the performance of the evaporator.
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Depending on the size of the tube bundle, different kinds
of tubes are then selected accordingly. This idea results
in a lower cost by replacing the enhanced tubes in the top
section with the less expensive plain tubes. It also results
in highly optimized evaporator with no parasitic losses.
Table 1 shows the design parameters and physical characteristics
of a case study. Also shown is an evaporator with same size
tubes but no enhancement. Due to length restriction the
maximum allowable tube length was limited to 16 ft (4877
mm). This restriction and the pressure drop limitation of
less than 15 psi (1 bar) would have forced the design to
54” (1372 mm) shell diameter with 2600 plain surface
tubes. As indicated in Table 1, this option would have had
substantial effect on the cost and the ammonia charge. Maintenance
and other running costs would have been additional expenses
during the life of this evaporator.
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During the design phase, several enhanced surface techniques
were evaluated and it was finally decided to adopt a various-type
enhanced tubes bundle. The depth of the bundle, two-pass
arrangement (pressure drop limitation), LMTD, and the approach
temperature directed the design towards a bundle with three
different types of tubes. Figure 2 shows the tube hole layout
with three designated sections I, II, and III each with
similar type of tubes. The modeling process is cumbersome,
proprietary, and cannot be disclosed. There is no model
available in the open literature. Fourteen rows of the lower
section had highly structured outside surface tubes with
strong nucleate boiling characteristics and internal grooves
(quantity 393) as shown in Fig. 3a. The middle section had
the bulk of the tubes (quantity 649; 17 rows) with slightly
wider gap structure on the outside in order to over come
strong convective effects and similar internal enhancement
as in the lower section tubes. This type of tube has shown
good nucleate boiling behavior in the presence of strong
convective forces (Fig. 3b). The decision to select appropriate
tube in the upper section took the bulk of modeling and
design time. Various calculations showed that the use of
tubes similar to lower two sections would have aggravated
the heat transfer due to vapor blanket phenomenon. Plain
surface tubes could have been used, but tube side had glycol,
which was in the final pass and would have cooled down,
therefore, resulting in higher viscosity and further aggravating
the problem. The calculations indicated that plain tubes
would have not achieved the desired goal. Tubes with only
internal enhancement in carbon steel or stainless steel
are not readily available. Hence, it was decided to use
twisted tape inserts in plain tubes as shown in Fig. 3c.
After careful evaluation and modeling, a stainless steel
tape with H/D = 5.5 (180° turn), width 0.5” (12.7
mm) and thickness .02” (0.51 mm) was selected. The
clearance between the tape and the tube inside diameter
was 0.06” (1.524 mm). It is worth noting that majority
research work in the open literature insists on snug fit,
however, this approach is only possible on the laboratory
level and is not practical from the manufacturing and maintenance
point of view. In fact a snug fit may have a negative effect
on the thermal hydraulics as shown by Ayub and Al-Fahed
(1993).
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Table 1 Existing enhanced tube evaporator vs. plain tube
flooded evaporator
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| Characteristics |
Existing |
Plain tube
flooded |
| Shell OD, in (mm) |
38 (965) |
54 (1372) |
| Tube length, in (mm) |
192 (4877) |
168 (4267) |
| Tube OD, in (mm) |
0.75 (19) |
0.75 (19) |
| No of Passes |
2 |
4 |
| Pressure drop, psi (bar) |
14.3 (0.99) |
9.5 (0.66) |
| Price $ ( in the year 2001) |
60,000 |
98,000 |
| Ammonia charge, lbs (kg) |
2000 (907) |
4500 (2041) |
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Design
capacity: 11,400,000 Btu/hr (3340 kW)
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Refrigerant:
Ammonia @ +14°F (-10°C) saturated suction temperature |
Process
fluid: 25% wt/wt ethylene glycol brine |
Process
flow: 3500 gpm (221 l/s) |
Process
inlet: +27°F (-2.78°C) |
Process
outlet:   +20°F (-6.67°C) |
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