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About Heat Exchangers
Heat exchangers are a devices used to transfer heat
from one fluid to another while preventing the two from intermingling.
Heat exchanger manufacturers can make three main types: shell and tube
heat exchangers, air-cooled heat exchangers and plate heat exchangers.
Generally, a metal wall partition, acting as a conductor, is between
the two fluids. A hot solution flowing on one side of the barrier transfers
its heat to a cooler solution flowing on the other side. Thermal energy
only flows from the hotter to the cooler in an attempt to reach equilibrium.
The surface area of a heat exchanger affects its speed and efficiency:
the larger a heat exchanger’s surface area, the faster and more
efficient the heat transfer.
Heat exchanger manufacturers typically construct their products of steel,
titanium, copper, bronze, stainless steel, aluminum or cast iron. One
of the biggest problems with heat exchangers is corrosion, which is common
due to the constant flowing of liquid. Unfortunately, this is very difficult
to avoid. To help prevent this, heat exchanger manufacturers need tubing
that is resistant to general corrosion, pitting, stress-corrosion cracking
(SCC), selective leaching and oxygen cell attack. Some heat exchanger
designs incorporate fins to provide greater thermal conductivity, which
also helps.
Although they are not always known by the name “heat exchanger,” these
devices are quite common and aren’t always industrial-types. For
instance, a car’s radiator is a useful device for transferring
heat from the engine to the air. Other examples of commercial uses for
heat exchangers include spa and swimming pool heating, home radiators,
hot water radiators, refrigerators and air conditioners. Whether in commercial
or industrial use, heat exchangers are vital as energy and money saving
devices since most mechanical, chemical and energy systems require heat
transferal of some sort.
Custom heat exchangers perform a crucial role in the design, operation
and maintenance of heating and air-conditioning systems, vehicle design,
power plants, refrigeration, chemical and industrial engineering systems.
They are also important in settings such as food processing, industrial
engineer processes, pharmaceutical, pulp and paper and the steel industry.
All power generation industries need them. Other industries that use
heat exchangers include aerospace, chemical, marine, semiconductor, petrochemical,
electronic, automotive, water treatment facilities and textiles.
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Types of Heat Exchangers
- have a central motor fan for heat removal.
- replace stale indoor air with fresh air from outside.
- are made up of specially formed plates,
vacuum brazed together.
- transfer heat through flat, corrugated plates.
- are the most
common. Elastomer gaskets are used in the plates, which contain the
pressure and control the
flow of each medium.
- are designed for use on boats.
- use plates clamped together in frames.
- use corrugated plates
that are mounted on a frame and fastened together. They are designed
so that the flows
of hot and
cool liquids run counter to each other, and are used when temperature
and pressure demands are moderate.
Plate
Heat Exchanger. (image courtesy of Flatplate.com)
- consist of pairs of plates that are laser welded together
into cassettes. These allow one
fluid to flow
in a welded channel and the other to flow in a gasketed channel.
- consist of tubes that are run through a large
circular tank, called the shell. Tube-and-shell (or
tubular) heat exchangers are used in applications where the
pressure and
temperature demands are high, and when the fluid contains
particles that block
the channels of a plate heat exchanger.
Shell & Tube
Heat Exchanger. (image courtesy of www.apiheattransfer.com)
- are fully welded and require no gaskets. These are usually
constructed of one material, generally
stainless steel.
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