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Heat Exchanger Terms
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The number of times, one, two or four, the liquid passes through the tube
bundle. Anything greater than a one pass is considered a multi-pass unit.
– Plate the tubes pass through for support that provides
a blocked path for the shell side flow, which forces the flows across
the tubes and improves the heat transfer performance. This is shaped
in various ways, but is basically segmental.
– The space between the tube bundle baffle plates
that is adjusted to maximize effectiveness.
– Like a channel with
straight tubes but without a removable cover. These do not have divider
walls and are at each end of the heat exchanger.
– Manages the tube side liquid for circulation
through the tubes. This can also hold the tube side inlet and outlet
connections and/or pass ribs.
– Heat exchanger
tubes parallel to each other from the inlet to the outlet manifold.
– The tubing assembly in removable bundle heat
exchangers. This typically includes tubes, tube sheets, baffles, spacers
and tie rods.
– A threaded bolt that holds the bonnet onto the core
of some types of heat exchangers.
– A kind of front end with a removable cover from which
the tube side flows in and out. A dividing wall separates the inlet and
outlet flow.
– Same function as a bonnet assembly, except that
the cover is removable and provides access to the ends of the tubes.
– What the tubes in a heat exchanger drain into.
– The shell and tube assembly in fixed tube sheet
heat exchangers.
– The parts that connect
the piping to the heat exchangers, come in many varieties.
– Used to cover an opening on a heat exchanger.
Covers are different from end plates because they can be removed to clean
the interior of the tube side, without distressing any piping.
– The part used
to support the heat exchanger and to secure it to the mounting surface
when welded or strapped to the shell. Cradles may be fixed or moveable.
– Calculations of part thickness and heat exchanger
design based on the most severe conditions or highest operating pressures
seen by the heat exchanger, to make the pressure slightly higher.
– A type of nozzle connection that provides a larger nozzle
opening between the pipe size and heat exchanger tube bundle, typically
to prevent tube erosion due to high inlet velocities.
– Covers welded to the heat exchanger. The majority of
end plates are used on bonnet assemblies.
– The first baffle space on a tube bundle, occurring between
the tube sheet and the first baffle plate. It is adjusted to maintain
the baffle plates within the two shell side nozzles.
– A small copper or stainless steel piece of tubing that
is crimped or squeezed onto the tie tube, up against the last baffle,
and locks the baffles into position.
– A tube sheet that is an essential part of the
core shell assembly.
– Placed at one end of a removable tube bundle
and allowed to move freely with the expansion and contraction of the
tube bundle due to temperature changes in operation. It always has a
smaller diameter than the immobile tube sheets.
– A device used between two parts that helps prevent leakage.
– A small perforated-plate or bar assembly in
the shell-side nozzle that can also be attached directly to the bundle.
This protects and prolongs tube life by breaking up and slowing down
the shell side fluid, which slows the erosion of the tubing.
– The side of the heat exchanger containing the
tube side inlet and outlet connections in a multi-pass unit.
– A metal or nylon ring on some packed joint heat
exchangers that holds the packing rings in place.
– The pressure a heat exchanger is operating
at while in use.
– The end of a heat exchanger, which contains the packed
joint and the packing rings.
– A lane in a tube layout where there are no tubes and
where the pass ribs mate.
– A separator plate inside a bonnet or channel that merges
with the pass lane surface, used to form multi-pass heat exchangers.
By arranging the ribs, a designer can direct the flow of the tube side
substance.
– Protects the heat exchanger parts (tubes, tube
sheets and bonnets) from corrosion by acting as a sacrificial anode so
that when water is flowing through the tube side it is consumed instead
of the other heat exchanger parts.
– The temperature
difference of a single fluid as it flows through the heat exchanger.
– A heat exchanger that has a removable tube bundle
from the shell casing. This provides easy cleaning of the shell side
and also a more feasible way of replacing depleted tubes.
– The end of a multi-pass heat exchanger where the
tube side fluid reverses its flow. This usually contains only small vent
and drain connections.
– The container where the tube bundle is placed and is the
conduit for one of the fluids in the heat exchanger.
– The assembly into which the tube bundle is placed.
It also houses the shell side connections.
– A formed plate that is welded to the shell (or bonnet)
pipe. It comes in many styles and shapes, including flanged and dished,
elliptical, ellipsoidal and hemispherical.
– The part of a heat
exchanger where the fluid circulates around the tubes.
– Tubing that holds the baffle plate in place.
– Two or more heat exchangers connected together side
by side or one on top of the other. Interconnecting piping hooks them
together.
– The tube sheet at one end of a removable
bundle that has a larger diameter than the floating tube sheet. The stationary
tube sheet is held in a permanent position between the bonnet and shell
flanges.
– A flange
used at a packed end joint. When a packed joint is tightened, the packing
ring is forced into this by the lantern ring/lantern gland.
– Bolted to the heat exchanger using bonnet to shell
flange bolting.
– Test that detects leaks on the joints of a heat
exchanger.
– Bars mounted between
the tube sheets to support the baffles.
– A tie tube takes
the place of the tie rod in a small diameter heat exchanger, and serves
the same purpose.
– A flow channel for one of the fluids in the heat exchanger.
These are often parallel within the shell to provide a large surface
area for heat transfer.
– Shows the positioning
of the tubes inside the heat exchanger and the locations of the tie rods.
– The apparatus that the tubes are affixed into that
holds them in place. It also provides a seal between the tube-side and
shell-side liquid.
– The fluid that circulates
through the inside of the tubes of the heat exchanger.
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