This invention relates to the use of superheated steam systems for energy input to process exchangers. The passive desuperheater incorporates the desuperheating operation within the exchanger condensate drum by direct contact between incoming superheated steam and the subcooled condensate draining from the exchanger.
Utility steam is typically available at superheated conditions for heat transfer applications. Superheated steam is less efficient for heat transfer than saturated steam. Superheated steam requires more exchanger surface area than an appropriate level of saturated steam to achieve the same energy input.
A refinery typically operates several levels of utility steam headers. The high pressure steam level is nominally 600 psig and is superheated to ˜700° F. These conditions are too severe for direct application as reboiler heat source for several distillation tower applications in the refinery. For instance, the steam is too hot for use in debutanizer reboiler service. The high temperature steam can be cooled by injecting water. However, traditional desuperheaters are complex, expensive, and suffer from poor reliability.
Traditionally, utility steam is de-superheated by the controlled injection of condensate to reduce superheat prior to use in heat exchangers. These injection type desuperheaters require a high pressure condensate source (typically requiring a new pump), an in-line injection nozzle and control valve, and are prone to reliability problems in field service.
The passive desuperheater of this invention revises the traditional configuration of typical equipment used in steam driven exchangers to perform the desuperheating service without external condensate injection. The passive desuperheater incorporates the desuperheating operation within the exchanger condensate drum by direct contact between incoming superheated steam and the subcooled condensate draining from the exchanger. This system eliminates the need for a separate condensate source and pump, the condensate injection nozzle, and the desuperheating control station.
Using superheated steam for process heat transfer is relatively space inefficient, since exchanger area required for desuperheating the steam transfers only a small fraction of the energy to the receiving stream. The portion of the exchanger dedicated to desuperheating often occupies a relatively large fraction of the overall high-pressure heat exchanger (i.e., desuperheater and condenser) area. This inefficiency results because the desuperheating operation has a low internal heat transfer coefficient due to the heat transfer mechanism during the normal operation of such a system. In comparison, the condenser portion of such an exchanger has a relatively high internal heat transfer coefficient. When the entire high-pressure heat exchanger functions as a condenser, the exchanger can be made smaller to achieve the same heat transfer specification.
The passive desuperheater of this invention introduces superheated steam below the associated condense pot liquid level. Intimate contact between in the incoming steam and the condensate is ensured in this way.
Heat exchangers using steam as the heat source are most efficient when the condition of the steam is saturated vapor, somewhat hotter than the target temperature of the fluid being heated. If the steam source is saturated, but too hot, process side “film boiling” can occur which impairs heat transfer efficiency. If the steam is not hot enough, excessive surface area is required due to the low driving force temperature difference across the exchanger.
In a steam heater, steam is introduced to one side of a shell and tube exchanger and process fluid is routed through the other side of the exchanger. For example: heavy naphtha from the bottom of a debutanizer communicates directly with the shell side of a shell and tube reboiler. Superheated 600 psig steam is routed to the tube side of the exchanger. As the steam condenses on the walls of the tubes, naphtha is heated and boiled on the shell side of the tubes. The condensed steam flows, by gravity, through the tubes and out the bottom of the exchanger into a condensate pot. The partially vaporized naphtha on the shell side is forced out the top of the shell side of the exchanger, back to the tower. The steam side condensate pot is normally drained on level control to maintain back pressure on the steam side of the exchanger.
The passive desuperheater utilizes the accumulating condensate to desuperheat incoming steam to saturated conditions by direct contact. Incoming steam is introduced below the liquid condensate level through a sparger to maximize direct contact heat transfer between the incoming steam and condensate. The incoming steam is cooled by the resident condensate as it bubbles through the liquid level. Steam leaving the condensate pot is at saturation point, somewhat warmer than the condensate drained from the exchanger.
The condensing temperature of steam is controlled by the pressure of the system. The pressure of the steam side with the passive desuperheater design is controlled by throttling incoming steam flow. Effectively, the condensing temperature on the steam side of the exchanger is varied to provide more or less driving force in the exchanger. As the driving force temperature difference changes, more or less heat transfer occurs to achieve the desired process outlet temperature.
The system is designed with the exchanger elevated above the condensate drum to allow condensate to free drain in to the drum. Steam is fed through a sparger into the bottom of the condensate drum, below the normal liquid level. Steam flow is modulated by a control valve, typically based on process outlet temperature. Condensate is drained from the drum via a control valve typically based on drum level. Additional system instrumentation would typically include flow indication on the incoming steam, level indication on the condensate drum, pressure indication on the condensate drum, and temperature indication on the steam line leaving the condensate drum.
A prior art system introduced steam above the liquid level in the bottom of the condensate drum and below a series of internal trays. Condensate from the exchanger was introduced above the internal trays. The trays were intended to promote mixing and heat transfer between the rising steam and the falling condensate. While this works, it does not work well. Direct contact desuperheating occurs but is insufficient due to inefficient contacting in the trays. Passive desuperheaters of this invention eliminate the contact trays inside by introducing superheated steam below the vessel liquid level via a sparger. Intimate contact between in the incoming steam and the condensate produce is ensured in this way. The new units with the revised design provide excellent results.
The present invention is illustrated by way of example in the accompanying drawings.
The above detailed description of the present invention is given for explanatory purposes. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that numerous changes and modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the whole of the foregoing description is to be construed in an illustrative and not a limitative sense, the scope of the invention being defined solely by the appended claims.
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