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Cooling Towers. CM 4120 Julie King Original Presentation by Todd King and I edited it. Presentation Outline. Introduction Components Types Problems References. Introduction. Cooling Tower = boxed shaped collection of multilayered wooden slats called the ‘fill’
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Cooling Towers CM 4120 Julie King Original Presentation by Todd King and I edited it.
Presentation Outline Introduction Components Types Problems References
Introduction • Cooling Tower = boxed shaped collection of multilayered wooden slats called the ‘fill’ • Air from the atmosphere (so it is ‘free’) enters from the bottom of the cooling tower and flows upward • Warm water (typically about 120oF) flows in the top of the cooling tower thru a water distribution header (to break the water into droplets) and cooler water exits the tower at the bottom
Introduction • Hot water transfers heat to cooler air as it passes thru the cooling tower (counter current flow is typical) • Sensible heat (temp change but stays same phase) accounts for approx. 15% of the heat transfer in a cooling tower. • Evaporation (latent heat : phase change) of the liquid water to water vapor accounts for approx. 85% of the heat transfer in a cooling tower.
Introduction • When the liquid water changes to vapor, it takes heat energy with it, leaving behind cooler liquid water. • Evaporation removes approximately 1000 BTU’s for every lb of liquid water that evaporates.
Basic Components of a Cooling Tower • Water Distribution System: warm process water is sprayed or allowed to fall into the cooling tower and onto the fill • Fan: used to push of pull the air into or out of the cooling tower • Water Basin: located at the base of the cooling tower. Water is collected in the basin and then this cooler water is pumped back to be used again (say in heat exchangers) • Make Up Water: Liquid water is added to the cooling water system to account for water lost to evaporation.
Atmospheric Cooling Tower (Natural Draft) • Use natural forces (wind) to move air through cooling tower. • Air flows in through the sides, and out the top. • Drift eliminators (top) prevent liquid water from being blown or sucked out of the cooling tower.
Cooling Tower Classification • Classified by direction of air flow • crossflow (airflow is horizontal to the fill ) • counterflow (airflow is vertical to the fill) • And, how the air flow is produced • Natural draft (atmospheric, etc) • Mechanically (forced draft or induced draft produced by fans)
Induced Draft Cooling Towers • Fans located at the top of the cooling tower • Lifts air out of the cooling tower, preventing recirculation • Probably the most common type used in chemical plants and refineries
Forced Draft Cooling Tower • Fans used to create a draft • Air forced in the bottom, and flows out the top • Typically solid sides
Cooling Tower System • In a chemical plant the water is used to remove heat from a process fluid (oil stream, etc.). This is how the water gets ‘hot’ and then needs to be cooled off in the cooling tower. • Always want the water to enter the ‘bottom’ of the heat exchanger and leave out the ‘top’ of the heat exchanger so any vapors can get out.
Definitions • Approach Temperature = T cool water out of cooling tower- T wet bulb of air in • Typically 5 to 15oF • Range = T warm water into cooling tower- T cool water out of cooling tower • Typically 10 to 30o F • HTU (height of transfer unit) typically 2 to 3 ft in a cooling tower
Factors that affect Cooling Tower Operations • Relative Humidity of air (want low RH) • Temperature of air (want low air temperature) • Wind Velocity • Water Contamination
Water Contamination • Water dissolves many things (especially hot water!) • When the hot water returns from the heat exchangers to the cooling tower, it is full of suspended solids. • As this hot water evaporates in the cooling tower, the solids are deposited which results in scale formation.
Problems Faced by Operators • Scale formation - suspended solids form deposits • Corrosion - electrochemical reactions with metal surfaces • Fouling - due to silt, debris, algae plug heat exchanger tubes • Wood (on the fill) decay - fungi
Water Composition Control • Suspended solids levels checked by operators (ppm) • Measured values compared to make-up (new) water concentrations • Problem controlled by “blowdown” (i.e., old water replaced with new water) • Note: 100 ppm = 100 lbs. suspended solids in 1,000,000 lb water • Often this work is ‘outsourced’ to another water specialist company such as Nalco and Betz
Water Composition Control (Solutions) • Scale formation • remove scale forming solids with softening agents • prevent scale forming materials by addition of chemicals • get scale to precipitate out so it can be removed
Water Composition Control (Solutions) • Corrosion • add chemical inhibitors to form a thin film that protects the metal) • Fouling • use filtering devices to remove silt, debris, algae, etc. • use dispersants (prevents solids from settling out) along with filtering devices • Wood decay on the fill • use biocides (often chlorine or bromine)
Water Testing (by Operators) • pH of water • total dissolved solids (TDS) • inhibitor concentration • chlorine or bromine concentration • precipitant concentration • filter and screen checks • air temperature and humidity
References • “Unit Operations of Chemical Engineering”, by McCabe, Smith, and Harriot, 6thed., McGraw Hill, New York, NY, 2001. • “The Process Technology Handbook”, by Charles E. Thomas, UHAI Publishing, Berne, NY, 1997.