Home > categories > Machinery & Equipment > Heat Exchanger > How do plate type heat exchangers work?
Question:

How do plate type heat exchangers work?

How do plate type heat exchangers work?

Answer:

By radiation and conduction.
*A plate heat exchanger is a type of heat exchanger that uses metal plates to transfer heat between two liquids. This has a major advantage over a conventional heat exchanger in that the liquids are exposed to a much larger surface area because the liquids spread out over the plate. This facilitates the transfer of heat, and greatly increases the speed of the temperature change. It is not as common to see plate heat exchangers due to the fact that they need well-sealed gaskets to prevent the liquids from escaping, although modern manufacturing processes have made them feasible. *The plate heat exchanger is a specialized design well suited to transferring heat between low-pressure liquids. In place of a pipe passing through a chamber, there are instead two chambers, usually thin in depth, separated at their largest surface by a metal plate. The plate produces an extremely large surface area, which allows for the fastest possible transfer. Making each chamber thin ensures that the majority of the volume of the liquid contacts the plate, again aiding exchange. In a Plate Heat Exchanger (PHE), plates are generally arranged in such a way that it forms channels of hot and cold liquid alternately. Due to corrugations in the plate, high turbulent flow increases the heat transfer rate. As compared to Shell Tube Heat Exchanger, PHE can give approach of 1°C whereas Shell Tube Heat Exchanger gives approach up to 5°C. For the same amount of heat exchange the size of the PHE is less, because of the large heat transfer area afforded by the plates (the large area through which heat can travel). Expansion of the heat transfer area is possible in PHE. Due to the above reasons PHE are used for the better and controlled heat transfer. Some of the big players in the PHE business are Tranter, Alfa Laval, GEA, APV and Sondex.

Share to: