Heat Exchangers : Piping Layouts

Posted By: ELK1nG

Heat Exchangers : Piping Layouts
Last updated 6/2021
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 337.00 MB | Duration: 0h 49m

All about Exchanger Piping

What you'll learn

Exchanger Classification

Constructional and Operating features for all Type exchangers

Layout Aspects & 3D Pictorial Views

Interesting facts : Optimizing Layout

Requirements

Piping, Oil & Gas awareness

Description

A heat exchanger is a system used to transfer heat between a source and a working fluid. Heat exchangers are used in both cooling and heating processes. The fluids may be separated by a solid wall to prevent mixing or they may be in direct contact.A heat exchanger is a device that allows heat from a fluid (a liquid or a gas) to pass to a second fluid (another liquid or gas) without the two fluids having to mix together or come into direct contact. If that's not completely clear, consider this. In theory, we could get the heat from the gas jets just by throwing cold water onto them, but then the flames would go out! The essential principle of a heat exchanger is that it transfers the heat without transferring the fluid that carries the heat.You can see heat exchangers in all kinds of places, usually working to heat or cool buildings or helping engines and machines to work more efficiently. Refrigerators and air-conditioners, for example, use heat exchangers in the opposite way from central heating systems: they remove heat from a compartment or room where it's not wanted and pump it away in a fluid to some other place where it can be dumped out of the way. The cooling fluid is completely sealed inside a network of pipes, so it never actually comes into contact with the air: it takes heat energy from the air inside and dumps it in the air outside, but it never mixes directly with that air.All heat exchangers do the same job—passing heat from one fluid to another—but they work in many different ways. The two most common kinds of heat exchanger are the shell-and-tube and plate/fin. In shell and tube heat exchangers, one fluid flows through a set of metal tubes while the second fluid passes through a sealed shell that surrounds them. That's the design shown in our diagram up above. The two fluids can flow in the same direction (known as parallel flow), in opposite directions (counterblow or counter-current), or at right angles (cross flow).Heat exchangers are integral part of any plant. In this video we will cover the following five modules.In this course following shall be covered:1. Classification of Heat Exchanger2. Constructional and Operating features for all Type exchangers3. Layout AspectsShell and Tube exchangerSpiral ExchangerPlate type Exchanger4. Layout Aspects : 3D Pictorial Views5. Interesting facts : Optimizing LayoutIt will cover all aspects of Piping layouts for Heat exchangers

Overview

Section 1: Exchanger Piping and Layouts

Lecture 1 Classification of Heat Exchangers

Lecture 2 Constructional and Operating features : All Type exchangers

Lecture 3 Heat Exchangers Layouts considerations

Lecture 4 Layout Aspects : Exchanger piping

Lecture 5 Layout Aspects : 3D Pictorial Views : Exchanger Piping

Lecture 6 Exchanger layout : Interesting facts : Optimizing Layout

Section 2: Bonus Section

Lecture 7 Bonus Lecture

Piping Design engineers & designers, Mechanical Engineers