Shell and Tube Heat Exchangers : Construction

Shell-and-tube heat exchangers are fabricated with round tubes mounted in cylindrical shells with their axes coaxial with the shell axis. The differences between the many variations ofthis basic type ofheat exchanger lie mainly in their construction features and the provisions made for handling differential thermal expansion between tubes and shell.

Awidely accepted standard is published by the Tubular Exchanger Manufacturers’ Association (TEMA). This standard is intended to supplement the ASME as well as other boiler and pressure vessel codes. The TEMA (1998) standard was prepared by a committee comprising representatives of27 U.S. manufacturing companies, and their combined expertise and experience provide exchangers ofhigh integrity at reasonable cost. TEMA provides a standard designation system that is summarized in and six examples ofthe shell-and-tube heat exchanger arrangements are shown in Fig. below.


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TEMA standard designation system for shell-and-tube heat exchangers. (From Saunders, 1988, with permission.)

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(a) Single-tube-pass baffled single-pass-shell shell-and-tube heat exchanger designed to give essentially counterflow conditions. The toroidal expansion joint in the center ofthe shell accommodates differential thermal expansion between the tubes and the shell. (b) U-tube single-pass-shell shell-and-tube heat exchanger. (c) Two-pass baffled single passshell shell-and-tube heat exchanger. (d) Heat exchanger similar to that of( c) except for the floating head used to accommodate differential thermal expansion between the tubes and the shell. (e) Heat exchanger that is similar to the heat exchanger in (d) but with a different type offloating head. (f) Single-tube-pass baffled single-pass-shell shell-and-tube heat exchanger with a packed joint floating head and double header sheets to assure that no fluid leaks from one fluid circuit into the other. (Courtesy ofthe Patterson-Kelley Co. and reproduced from Fraas, 1989, with permission.)


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