This invention is in the field of air cooled heat exchangers and particularly headers for heat exchange tubes in an air cooled heat exchangers.
Large chemical processing plants utilize a great many tube type heat exchangers which typically include bundles of heat exchange tubes whose ends are coupled to a header. To comply with stringent safety procedures and also for normal efficient operation, the header components of heat exchangers and tubes are periodically subjected to hydrostatic leak testing, at least twice, once after fabrication at the manufacturing site and secondly before plant startup in the field to ensure that the joints are free of defects and leakage. After the heat exchangers are tested and the results accepted, the heat exchangers are drained of water to ensure that internal header surfaces and tubes are dry. Drying may be done by hot air or inert gas. The purpose of internal surface drying is to prevent internal corrosion that might be caused after water testing during shipment and in standby operation mode. Such testing is necessary to avoid catastrophic joint leaks, and obviously to detect and correct or monitor even small leaks.
Conventional headers of air cooled heat exchangers are designed as closed boxes, each containing a plug sheet, tubesheet, end plates, top and bottom plate, nozzles, stiffeners and partition plates. Due to the complexity of air cooled heat exchanger headers which include corners and undercut regions, complete water draining and drying is not achieved with current drying procedures. Such accumulated moisture and water during shipment and in standby operation mode becomes stagnant and then corrosive, causing severe damage to internal parts of the headers and to adjacent parts of tubes coupled to the headers. Consequently, tube sheets and the heat exchange tubes themselves are at risk of damage which is not only expensive to repair, but causes shutdown of the whole heat exchanger. When such periodic inspection of headers results in repair or replacement and in many heat exchangers being taken out of line, costs in large chemical treatment plants can have production losses reaching $300,000 per day due to downtime.
The present invention addresses this severe problem with a new design for headers intended to extend equipment cycle life and prevent unexpected failures due to corrosion.
A first object of the present invention is to design a new header structure that provides better drainage of water that is used in hydrostatic testing and that will leave internal surfaces of the headers dry without traditional water stagnation and corrosion.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a new header structure for air cooled heat exchangers where in-flow is into a space that includes a floor partition that is bent downward at its four corner regions to provide gravity drain into a drain pipe at each corner of hydrostatic testing water.
A further object of the present invention is for said partition floor area to be formed of a plate having all four side edges each define a convex curve highest at the center and descending to the four corners. The curvature may be about a single axis thus developing a fragment of a straight cylinder, or may be about two perpendicular axes developing an umbrella-like roof.
A still further object of the invention described above is for the floor to be a generally continuous sheet.
Another object of the invention described above is to provide a generally box shaped header where one side wall comprises a tube sheet through which a plurality of heat exchange tubes are coupled.
An additional object is to provide a method for reducing accumulation of stagnated water in a header of an air cooled heat exchanger by forming the floor of the inlet chamber to have a continuous downward curvature to all four corners from which further downward extending drain ducts.
Accordingly, another object is to provide a header for an air cooled heat exchanger comprising: (a) a housing having top and bottom walls and side walls and an inlet and an outlet, one of said side walls being a tube wall for connection to a plurality of heat exchanger tubes; (b) a partition wall between said top and bottom walls defining upper and lower regions, said partition being a sheet having a higher central area which extends downward to corners of said upper region; and (c) each corner having a drain aperture for fluid in said upper region to drain by gravity out of said upper region.
Accordingly, another object is to provide a heat exchanger comprising: (a) a header box having walls including a top, a bottom, and four sides; (b) a partition wall positioned within the box between the top and bottom walls defining an upper portion of the box and a lower portion of the box, the partition wall having a higher central area which extends downward to four corner regions; (c) each corner region having a drain aperture for fluid in the upper portion to drain by gravity out of the upper portion; (d) a return header; and (e) a plurality of heat exchange tubes connected between one side wall of the box and the return header, wherein an upper portion of the heat exchange tubes carry fluid from the upper portion of the box and wherein a lower portion of the heat exchange tubes carry fluid into the lower portion of the box; wherein during operation of the heat exchanger, fluid flows into the upper portion of the box via an inlet, which then flows into the upper heat exchange tubes, which then passes through the return header, which then flows into the lower heat exchange tubes, which then flows into the lower portion of the box, and which then flows out of the box via an outlet.
In
Cleaning water or other fluid which enters inlet 16 and then flows to tubes 18, would typically leave moisture residue in the corners and other areas of zone 17. In the new header such residue moisture and/or liquid is automatically drained to the four corners 13C and out drain holes 13D which are about ¼ to ½ inch in diameter, to which are welded corresponding drain tubes 13E. Partition sheet 13 may serve additionally as a stiffener plate as it is welded to the four sides of the header box to strengthen same. Each drain tube 13E has its own valve 13F to be closed when the system is in operation or testing has been terminated. The header in
While the invention has been described in conjunction with several embodiments, it is to be understood that many alternatives, modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the foregoing description. Accordingly, this invention is intended to embrace all such alternatives, modifications and variations which fall within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/567,433, filed Dec. 6, 2011, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130140012 A1 | Jun 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61567433 | Dec 2011 | US |