(723f) Heat-Exchanger Bypass Control
AIChE Annual Meeting
2011
2011 Annual Meeting
Computing and Systems Technology Division
Advances In Process Control
Thursday, October 20, 2011 - 5:00pm to 5:20pm
Many methods are used for controlling temperatures in heat exchanger systems. Direct manipulation of the flowrate of either the hot or the cold stream is most often used when that stream is a utility (cooling water, steam, hot oil or refrigerant). When the flowrates of both streams are set by process requirements, heat-exchanger bypassing is widely used. A portion of one of the streams (either hot or cold) is sent through the heat exchanger and the remainder is bypassed around the exchanger. The temperature of the mixed steam is controlled by valves in each path. This system provides very tight temperature control since the dynamics of blending a hot stream and a cold streams are very fast.
This paper explores the design and control issues when heat-exchanger bypassing is used. The design optimization variables included the fraction of bypassing, the area of the heat exchanger and the design pressure drops over the control valves. Dynamic rangeability requires heat-transfer rates to be adjustable over a wide range. As expected, results demonstrate that larger area and more bypassing improve the ratio of maximum-to-design heat transfer rates, which is important for dynamic controllability. An unexpected, counter-intuitive result is that control valve design pressure drops have little effect on rangeability in heat-exchanger bypass systems in which variable-speed pumps are used to maintain total flowrates.