|
|
|
|
Search result: 11 of 73 |
(WO/2000/067995) ISOLATED TRACER HAVING CONTROLLED CONDUCTANCE RATE AND METHOD OF MAKING SAME
- Biblio. Data
- Description
- Claims
- National Phase
- Notices
- Documents
- Note: OCR Text
- Note: Text based on automatic Optical
Character Recognition processes. Please
use the PDF version for legal matters
- Note: Text based on automatic Optical
ISOLATED TRACER HAVING CONTROLLED CONDUCTANCE RATE AND METHOD OF MAKING SAME This application claims priority from U. S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No.
60/133,176 filed May 7,1999.
The present invention relates generally to a heat transfer apparatus and method, and more particularly to a heat tracing apparatus and method.
Tracing systems using steam or hot fluids as the heating medium are generally
installed in industrial process plants such as refineries and chemical plants to prevent the
freezing of materials in process, service, or utility piping or equipment during shut-down
periods or in cold weather. Also, process fluids having pour points higher than normal
ambient temperatures require heat to keep them flowing all year long. Steam tracing may be
defined as a small-elongated pipe or tube carrying steam, which is placed parallel and
attached to the outer surface of a pipeline or other industrial equipment that must be kept
sufficiently warm. Since the steam tracer follows or"traces"the pipeline, the tube or pipe is
referred to as the"tracer","tracer tube","tracer pipe"or simply"tracing."In heat transfer
equipment where one of the fluids condenses, the equipment is designated as either a
condenser or as a heater, depending upon whether the primary purpose of the equipment is to
condense the one fluid or heat the other fluid. A steam tracer is therefore a heater since the
purpose of the steam in the tracer is to heat the process fluid in a pipe or equipment by the
condensation of steam in the tracer. Once a steam tracer has been attached to the pipe or
equipment
There are three basic methods of steam tracing. The first and most widely used
method is"convection"or"bare"tracing which is simply a metallic tube generally of copper
or stainless steel construction (or sometimes a small bore steel pipe) which is placed parallel
to a pipeline and secured in place with tie wire, metallic banding materials, high temperature
tape or other similar methods.
Although bare convection tracing is the most widely used method of steam tracing, it also contributes the most to energy wastage and environmental pollution due to being used on freeze protection and other low to medium temperature applications where it frequently raises pipe temperatures much higher than required. This energy wastage for over designed steam tracing circuits can be compared to a steam leak at a fitting or a failed steam trap. For example, a steam leak as small as a 1/32-inch hole will waste 3,175 pounds of steam a month in a 100 psig steam system. Most medium sized refineries and chemical plants will have at least 50,000 feet of steam tracing and sometimes much more. If just 1% of the bare convection traced piping, or 500 feet, is producing 8 Btu's per foot more than required, the energy wastage is equivalent to the 1/32-inch hole or 3,175 pounds of steam a month. Most designs of bare convection tracing used for freeze protection or low to medium temperature applications waste considerably more than 8 Btu's per foot of traced piping as will be described later.
The primary purpose of steam tracing is to maintain the heat in a pipe or equipment
by supplying heat to the pipe at a rate equal to the heat lost from the pipe through the thermal
insulation. Selecting a steam tracer that will deliver heat at a rate as close to the calculated
heat loss as possible will save considerable energy and reduce pollution. The heat loss of a
thermally insulated pipe can be expressed by equation (1) below. The outside surface film
coefficient of the thermal insulation is excluded in this equation and can generally be ignored
for outdoor conditions with wind where most industrial piping systems are located. Since
thermal insulation is generally sized to fit at least one pipe size larger than the pipe being
heated for a steam traced system, the heat lost through the insulation is calculated on the basis
of the actual size of the insulation, not the size of the pipe being heated.
0.523 =
The tracer conductance Ct is experimentally derived by measuring the heat loss
Accurate temperature control for a pipe carrying process fluids in an industrial plant along with freeze protection for service and utility lines is essential to the successful production of the finished product and the conservation of energy. Inaccurate or poorly designed steam tracing systems can create serious problems for a process plant.
The second method of steam tracing is
A conduction steam tracing method is disclosed in U. S. Patent No. 3,949,189.
The third method of steam tracing is called"isolated"tracing and is used where less
heat is required than that provided by the previous two steam tracing methods. Normal
saturated steam pressures (temperatures) will frequently deliver too much heat and use
excessive energy for low temperature or temperature sensitive applications when bare
Pat. No. 5,086,836.
Tubing that is factory insulated and covered with an outer polymer jacket is well known in the industry. It is used in refineries, chemical plants, power plants, steel mills and other industries to transport process gases or other fluid streams for flow rate measurement, plant emissions analysis or simply to deliver a fluid from one point to another. Factory insulated tubing of this type is similar to that used for isolated steam tracing. However, it has been found that the standard product cannot be used effectively as an isolated tracer. Isolated tracers require special fabrication to produce specific conductance rates at two or more levels below that covered by bare convection tracers in order to optimize the heat delivery potential.
A substantially precise and optimized rate of heat delivery from the isolated steam tracer is a critically important factor for keeping industrial pipeworks sufficiently warm during extreme weather conditions while reducing the heat output, energy consumption and pollution that can be attributed to many bare convection tracing designs.
A well-known method of applying insulation to long coils of tubing or to piping
involves the helical winding of thin strips of thermal insulation material in an overlapping
fashion. Multiple passes of helically wound insulation strips are applied and
Multiple layers of the insulation strip can be applied in a linear fashion to arrive at the desired thickness. This procedure is called the"linear wrap"method. As the insulation is being applied in both the linear wrapping and the helical wrapping methods, the insulation on the tube is generally captured immediately as it leaves the front of the wrapping head or die by encircling the insulation material with wire, cord, metal, coils, rings or a polymeric tape- like material in order to keep it from expanding circumferentially.
Often a reflective material such as an aluminized plastic tape is used to capture the insulation material and help retard heat loss by radiation. A suitable outer jacket comprising a wrapped polymeric tape or an extruded polymeric material is generally applied over the insulation and tape-like material to provide weather protection.
The primary purpose of the known methods of factory insulating tubes or pipes is to reduce the cost over field installed insulation of these lines that are used to transport process, service, or utility fluids throughout an industrial plant. The insulating effect is of primary importance. Therefore, insulation is preferably maintained at as low a density as possible with air trapped in interstices to minimize thermal conductivity. Compression of the insulating material in either the helical wrapping or linear wrapping manufacturing methods described herein has been considered undesirable because it reduces the insulating quality of the preinsulated tubing.
Compression of insulation has been mentioned in the prior art, but not as a desired attribute. For example, U. S. Pat. No. 3,594,246 describes a die as"compressing the insulating material around the circumference of the piping. "However, this simply means that when a pipe or tube is drawn through the funnel-shaped die and nozzle, some compressive force is applied to cause the long flat strips of insulation to conform to the shape of the tube or pipe. Although wrapping methods such as this may compress the insulating material to some minor degree, purposeful and measured compression of the insulating material to bring about an increase in the thermal conductivity is not a desired feature or intent of any of these prior art wrapping methods.
The thermal conductivity or K value of a material describes the rate at which heat is
conducted through the material. Generally, it is desirable to maintain the thermal
conductivity of the insulating material as it is in its manufactured thickness by reducing or
substantially eliminating compressive forces on the insulation when it is applied in the linear
In assignee's U. S. Pat. No. 5,897,732, a process is described that accomplishes the wrapping operation with basically no compressive forces applied to the insulation. The advantage of this method for producing insulated tubes designed to transport hot or cold fluids is that the tubes can be wrapped at a substantially faster rate than the helical wrapping method. Further, theoretical calculations of the surface temperature of tubes insulated by the process of the'732 patent closely match the heat transfer measured in actual laboratory tests because the insulation material essentially retains its manufactured thermal conductivity.
Therefore, reliable surface temperatures for personnel protection and other purposes can be easily calculated for tubes transporting hot fluids for various industrial applications.
A heat transfer coefficient or tracer conductance
A disadvantage which arises by using the standard insulated tubing products as steam tracers is that the standard products are designed for transporting hot or cold fluids from point A to point B in an industrial facility and are not manufactured for a specific conductance rate that will be most suitable for a steam tracing application. The standard insulated tubing product is designed and manufactured for its insulating value and not for its conducting value.
Certain insulating variances are not particularly critical for the standard product as long as the surface temperature of the outer polymeric jacket covering the insulation does not reach a temperature that will present a personnel hazard. But, where insulated tubes are used as heaters to provide temperature maintenance for pipes and equipment as is the case with isolated steam tracers, variable or arbitrary heat transfer rates present an obstacle to the comparison and modeling of the heat transfer characteristics for systems design purposes.
A desired heat conductance is provided by a heat transfer assembly, which is made by
covering a tube with insulation and compressing the insulation to a desired thickness to
provide a desired thermal conductance rate. The desired thickness and compression of the
insulation can be provided by wrapping a tape-like material around the insulation.
Compression on the insulation can be controlled by adjusting tension on the tape-like material as it is wound around the insulation that covers the tube.
An isolated tracer is provided that includes a tube, a layer of insulation covering the tube, and a layer of tape-like material wrapped around the insulation such that the insulation is compressed to a desired thickness. Having the insulation compressed to a desired thickness provides a desired thermal conductance rate for the isolated tracer. A jacket of polymeric material can cover the tape-like material, which covers and compresses the insulating material. By testing an isolated tracer thus made, tension on the tape-like material can be adjusted to provide a desired compression on the insulating material, which then provides a desired conductance output rate.
In order to more fully understand the drawings referred to in the detailed description
of the present invention, a brief description of each drawing is presented, in which:
Fig.
Figures 1 and 2 have been provided to better illustrate the prior art tracers described in the background of the invention. Figure 1 illustrates a typical bare convection tracing system in cross-sectional view. Referring to Fig. 1, a process pipe 10 is traced by a bare convection tracer 12 that carries a heat transfer medium 14. The combined process pipe 10 and the bare convection tracer 12 are covered with a thermal insulation 16, as known in the prior art.
Figure 2 illustrates a typical conduction tracing system in cross-sectional view.
Referring to Fig. 2, a process pipe 20 is traced by an elongated tube or pipe 22 that carries a heat transfer medium 24. The pipe 22 is encapsulated in a heat transfer compound 25 to form the conduction tracer 26. The combined process pipe 20 and the conduction tracer 26 are covered with thermal insulation 28, as known in the prior art.
The isolated tracer system of the present invention, generally designated as reference
As shown in Fig. 4, a metallic or high temperature polymeric tube or tubular element 46 is surrounded by an insulating material 48a and 48b, which is wrapped by and in a tape- like material 54 that holds and compresses the insulating material 48a and 48b to a desired diameter. The tube 46 can be made of copper, steel, stainless steel, aluminum or other metallic or plastic materials suitable for use with saturated steam or other hot fluids.
Preferably, an outer jacket 60 is applied over the tape-like material 54. The material of the outer jacket 60 can be a wrapped, braided, or extruded polymeric material, such as an extruded silicone rubber.
The insulating material 48a and 48b is preferably made of flexible, compressible fiberglass, mineral wool or other types of flexible, compressible insulating materials. The insulating material 48a and 48b is preferably wrapped around the tubular element 46 by a linear wrapping method or by a helical wrapping method. Multiple layers of insulating material 48a and 48b can be provided by a combination of linear wrapping and helical wrapping, although a combination is not required.
Although an isolated tracer 34 according to the present invention is not limited to any particular type of insulating material 48a and 48b, tape-like material 54, or jacketing material 60, by way of example, a tube 46 for carrying steam may be wrapped with fiberglass insulation 48a and 48b, which may be captured as it leaves a die 42 and compressed to a desired diameter and density by an aluminized plastic tape 54 as shown in Fig. 4. Two or more layers of fiberglass insulation 48a and 48b may be wrapped on the tube 46 and covered by the aluminized tape 54, which may or may not be wrapped on each successive layer of the fiberglass insulation 48a and 48b, before an extruded outer jacket 60 of silicone rubber is applied.
Figure 4 provides an example of a linear tube wrapping process 40 in which a tubular
lead-through die 42 includes a rear portion 42a in the shape of a funnel. A portion of the die
42 has been cut away in the drawing to show the interior thereof, and a front die portion 42b
In the linear wrap process example illustrated in Fig. 4, two strips of suitable insulating material 48a and 48b are positioned lengthwise along the piping or tubing 46. The pipe 46, together with the strips of insulating material 48a and 48b, are passed through the funnel-shaped portion 42a of the die 42 and the insulating material 48a and 48b is molded around the pipe or tube 46 as it passes through the funnel 42a into the narrow portion of the circular nozzle 42b. The insulating material 48a and 48b is kept in the shape of the nozzle 42b until it is extruded out a front edge 42c of the nozzle 42b. Upon exiting the nozzle 42b, the insulating material 48a and 48b is immediately captured by the tape-like material 54 which is wound onto the outside of insulating material 48a and 48b so that loops 54a overlap each other.
In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the tape-like material 54 is preferably applied under adjustable preset tension as it is fed from a roll of tape 54b to compress the insulating material 48a and 48b onto the tube 46 to conform to a predetermined diameter compatible with the outside diameter of the tube and the thickness and compressibility of the flexible insulating material 48a and 48b. As explained in greater detail below, the predetermined diameter is found by estimating the required thermal conductivity and thus the dimension of compression required of the insulating material, then physically testing the prototype on a pipe. Test results determine if the calculated diameter is accurate or must be increased or decreased to meet the required conductance value. The tape-like material 54 is unwound from a roll of tape 54b onto the insulating material 48a and 48b while moving the roll of tape 54b in a helical path around the insulating material 48a and 48b as it exits the front edge 42c of the nozzle 42b in such a way that loops 54a of tape 54 overlap each other to a desired extent. Controlling the speed at which the tubing or piping 46 leaves the die 42 versus the speed at which the tape 54 is unwound produces a desired pitch of overlapping of wound tape 54a. The tape-like material 54 can be a metalized or non- metalized polymeric tape, cord, fiber, or strip, and an aluminized polymeric material is used in one embodiment.
Further, the apparatus and process of assignee's U. S. Pat. No. 5,897,732 can be used
and/or modified to manufacture the isolated tracer of the present invention. Applicant herein
incorporates by reference assignee's U. S. Pat. No. 5,897,732. The process of the'732 patent
accomplishes the wrapping operation with basically no compressive forces applied to the
Target calculations for the amount of compression or reduction in the insulated tube diameter required to produce a specific conductance rate for the isolated tracers of this invention is made easier by having the known standard insulation thermal conductivity rate as a starting point.
A method is thus provided for making an isolated tracer heat transfer assembly that
has a predictable and repeatable heat transfer rate. The isolated tracer 34 is adapted for
mounting on a pipe 32 or the like and has a tubular element 46 that is covered with insulating
material 48. The insulating material 48 is covered by a tape-like material 54, which is
tensioned so that the insulating material 48 is compressed by the tape-like material 54 to a
predetermined diameter matching a specific desired conductance output. The tape-wrapped,
insulated tube is preferably covered by an outer jacket of polymeric material 60, such as
silicone rubber or polyolefin. The isolated tracer assembly 34 is tested to confirm the
conductance output, which typically falls within a range of approximately 0.105
In order to provide accurate and energy efficient designs for temperature control of process, service and utility lines in a process plant, and for computer modeling, it is desirable to provide isolated steam tracers with predetermined and substantially consistent conductance rates below the conductance rates provided by bare convection tracing. Bare convection tracing frequently delivers more heat than necessary for freeze protection and other uses such as the tracing of sensitive materials such as caustics and acids. The higher temperatures delivered by bare convection tracing may not have any adverse effect on the quality of certain other materials such as heavy fuel oils or asphalt products. However, any additional heat above the required amount to hold pipe temperatures at a predetermined level contributes to unnecessary stress in the pipeworks, wastes energy and causes more fuel to be burned to generate the steam, which increases environmental pollution.
Isolated tracers as described herein can hold process temperatures from
Heat transfer rates change depending on pipe size and the rate of change is not
necessarily the same for each tracing method described herein. Therefore, the energy saving
comparisons between tracing methods vary from pipe size to pipe size. A typical energy
savings example of an isolated tracer over a bare convection tracer is as follows: An 8-inch
process line is to be held at
An isolated tracer according to the present invention will hold the pipe temperature at
The present invention includes the discovery that identifying and delivering a
specified outside diameter for a tube wrapped with thermal insulation can produce
substantially precise and consistent heat transfer rates for isolated tracers. Control over the
specified outside diameter of the insulated tube is provided by adjusting the applied tension
of the helically wound tape-like material as it captures the insulating material when it exits
the wrapping head or die. The insulation material on the tube will be compressed to a
predetermined diameter which will alter the thermal conductivity as the insulating material
becomes more dense in the tape wrapping process to meet the required tracer conductance
Multiple isolated tracers with a standardized conductance rate for each tracer are required to cover the conductance range below that provided by bare tracing.
For example, an approximate diameter for an isolated tracer made up of 3/8 inch O. D.
tubing wrapped with 0.125 inch thick fiberglass insulation and covered with an aluminized
tape material, will have an outside diameter of approximately 0.631 inches without any
compression. After extruding a silicone rubber jacket approximately 0.050 inches thick over
the insulated and tape wrapped assembly, the tracer will exhibit a conductance rate of
approximately 0.244
By compressing the isolated tracer to 0.575 inches in diameter, the heat transfer rate is increased by approximately 23% to provide a more suitable temperature range for this tracer.
It is to be understood that the amount of compression can be modified to adjust the heat transfer rate. Preferably, to adequately cover process pipe temperatures in a range below that which can be held by a bare convection tracer, a heater is selected to deliver a conductance rate that is in the approximate range of 30% to 40% below that of a bare convection tracer.
Each preceding heater is designed to provide a conductance rate approximately 30% to 40% below the preceding isolated heater.
By way of example and without limiting the present invention to the following
example, the base conductance rate for a 3/8-inch O. D. bare convection tracer is
approximately 0.55
The three conductance levels for the insulation wrapped isolated tracers mentioned above are provided by the method of controlling the diameter of the tracers. By adjusting the tension on the tape-like material used to capture the insulation material in the helical wrap and linear wrap insulation methods as previously described, the necessary compression is applied to bring the tracer diameter to a predetermined dimension. Experimental testing has shown that isolated tracers produced by this method will supply consistent and repeatable heat transfer rates over a range of commonly used industrial pipe sizes.
The conductance rates for these three isolated tracers in the above example used for
heating pipes, ducts, conduits, tubes or other equipment can be expressed by the following
equations derived by Applicant:
N = Number of tracers
Heater B follows the expression:
The mathematical expressions have been proven to be substantially consistent with
experimental test results for the various pipe sizes tested. Isolated steam tracers
manufactured according to the present invention by the linear wrap, helical wrap or other
Thus, the approximate conductance rate
An approximate conductance rate
Again, the conductance value for pipes and other cylindrical objects equivalent to or larger
than a nominal pipe size of 10 inches remains at the conductance value corresponding to the
A third equation for calculating an approximate conductance rate
For pipes and other cylindrical objects equivalent to or larger than a nominal pipe size of 10
inches, the conductance value is again approximated as the conductance value determined for
a
A heat transfer assembly according to the present invention reduces steam consumption over bare convection tracing in the range of approximately 10% to 60%.
The foregoing disclosure and description of the invention are illustrative and explanatory thereof, and various changes in the materials as well as in the details of the illustrated apparatus and construction and method of operation may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention.