- Open Access
- Total Downloads : 1972
- Authors : Prof. Chavan Dattatraya K., Prof. L.S. Utpat, Kadam Govinda, Hardare Prasad, Zende Nitish, Shinde Sandeep
- Paper ID : IJERTV1IS4244
- Volume & Issue : Volume 01, Issue 04 (June 2012)
- Published (First Online): 01-07-2012
- ISSN (Online) : 2278-0181
- Publisher Name : IJERT
- License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Pultruded FRP Cooling Tower – Design, Development and Validation
Pultruded FRP Cooling Tower – Design, Development and Validation
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Professor Mechanical Engineering Dept., MMCOE, Pune-52. University of Pune,Maharashtra,India PhD scholar,JJT University,Rajasthan
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Professor Mechanical Enginerring Dept., MMCOE, Pune-52 Pune University,Maharashtra,India
(Graduate Students from MMCOE, Pune-52)
Abstract- Cooling tower is an essential part of any industry or power plant, which is used to cool the condenser circulating water or hot water by the principle of evaporation cooling. The whole system may fail when there is failure or absence of cooling tower.
According to cooling tower industries and research scientist working in the field of cooling towers, it is observed that conventional cooling towers have fewer life cycles and high cost. Hence FRP cooling towers are introduced to increase towers life cycle. The requirement of industries is to produce a structural FRP cooling tower (like M.S or Timber cooling tower) instead of package FRP cooling tower which can be made up to 14 ft X 14 ft only. Hence by comparing M.S, Timber & FRP it can be observed that FRP towers are less costly, structurally stable and also have more life cycles. However package FRP cooling tower cannot be erected for sizes greater than 14 ft X 14 ft, we in collaboration with the company have introduced the structural FRP cooling tower to solve these problems.
So for the first time FRP cooling tower is developed in association with M-Square Engineers, Pune-38.
Keywords – Cooling tower, Pultrusion, FRP, Drift Eliminators, Fills, etc.
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Problem Definition:
To make a prototype of FRP cooling tower of size 900 X 900 X 1200 mm and to check the structural stability with approximate loadings by using software and also by hand calculations and validate the design and results.
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Introduction
A cooling tower is an equipment used to reduce the temperature of hot water by extracting heat from water and emitting it to the atmosphere by the principle of evaporative cooling.
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Various Types of Mechanical Draft Cooling Towers
Mechanical draft towers have large fans to force or draw air through circulated water. The water falls downwards over fill surfaces, which helps to increase the contact time between the water and the air – this helps to maximize heat transfer rate between the two. Cooling rates of mechanical draft towers depend upon various parameters such as fan diameter and speed, fills for system resistance etc.
Mechanical draft towers are available in a large range of capacities. Towers can be either factory built or field erected for example concrete towers are only field erected.
Many towers are constructed so that they can be grouped together to achieve the desired capacity. Thus, many cooling towers are assemblies of two or more individual cooling towers or cells. The number of cells they have, e.g., an eight-cell tower, often refers to such towers. Multiple-cell towers can be linear, square, or round depending upon the shape of the individual cells and whether the air inlets are located on the sides or bottoms of the cells.
The three types of mechanical draft towers:
Forced draft cooling tower:
Figure-1 Forced Draft Cooling Tower
Induced draft cross flow cooling tower:
Figure-2 Induced Draft Counter Flow Cooling Tower
Induced draft counter flow cooling tower:
Figure-3 Induced Draft Cross Flow Cooling Tower
Existing Different Types of Cooling Towers
Figure-4 Timber made Cooling Figure-5 RCC made Cooling Tower Tower
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What is FRP?
FRP stands for Fibreglass-Reinforced Plastics. Other terms that are used interchangeably with FRP are Reinforced Thermoset Plastic (RTP), Reinforced Thermoset Resin (RTR) and Glass- Reinforced Plastic (GRP).
All of the above mentioned terms should not be confused with reinforced thermoplastic which is entirely different. There is a wide selection of thermoset resins available for most corrosion resistant applications. Unlike thermoplastics, thermoset plastics have a highly cross linked molecular structure. The result is a flexural, tensile strength, and temperature performance.
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Pultrusion Process
Pultrusion is the mechanized process to manufacture GRP structures. Pultrusion uses the extrusion principle of producing having constant cross section to give strength.
Figure-6 Pultrusion Process
In Pultrusion, the Glass Fibre reinforcements are pulled by means of moving clamps, through a resin bath and then through a die, where it is formed into the required shape. The die is preheated by electric motors, thermal fluids or microwave. The formation of profile, curing and consolidation of the section all takes place in the die. The block diagram of the pultrusion process is as shown in fig-6.
The glass fibres used may be in the form of ravings or strand mats. The other materials that go into the product are resins, fillers, lubricants, pigments for colours, surfacing veils and mats, etc. Mostly phenolic, polyesters and epoxy resins are used for bonding.
Mechanical Properties of Pultruded Profiles Vs Other Structural Materials
Mechanical Properties
Pultruded FRP
Rigid PVC
Mild Steel
Stainless Steel
Wood
Tensile Strength (N/mm2)
382
44
340
340
80
Flexural Strength (N/mm2)
468.3
70
380
380
12
Flexural Modulus (N/mm2)
22489
2400
196000
196000
700
Izod Impact (Kg.m/cm)
2.15
0.09
1.5
0.53
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Physical & Chemical Properties of Pultruded Profiles Vs Other Structural Materials
Physical & Chemical Properties
Pultruded FRP
Rigid PVC
Mild Steel
Stainless Steel
Wood
Thermal Conductivity (Kcal/hr/m2/ C)
24.4
6.4
1220
732.00
0.4
Coeff. of Linear Expansion (cm/cm C) x 10-6
5.2
37
8
10
1.7
Safe Working Temp.
(C)
td bgcolor=”#E2EEFC”>
130
55
600
600
160
Flame Resistance
Good*
Poor
Excellent
Excellent
Poor
Corrosion Resista
nce :
a. Acidic
Excellent
Good
Poor
Excellent
Poor
b. Alkaline
Good
Fair
Good
Excellent
Poor
c. Solvents
Fair
Poor
Good
Excellent
Fair
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CAD Modelling
Figure-7 CAD Drawings
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CATIA Modelling
Details:
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Overall Dimensions 900 x 900 x 1200 mm
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Motor Specifications 1 , 0.5 HP, 1440 rpm
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Fan Size 300 mm in diameter
Figure-8 CATIA model (3ft x 3 ft)
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Design and Analysis
Comparison and validation by using ANSYS
Figure-9 Analysis of 3 ft x 3 ft Model
Design of a 16 ft x 16 ft Cooling Tower
Figure-10 CATIA model (16ft x 16 ft)
Thermal Design
4.
CT outlet temperature
°C
31
5.
Average water flow
m3/hr
500
Readings for 16 ft x 16 ft Cooling Tower
Water flow rate – 500 m3/hr Hot water temperature (HWT) – 42 OC Cooling water temperature (CWT) – 31 OC Wet bulb temperature (WBT) – 28 OC Exit air temperature – 38 OC
(Referring Psychometric Chart)
Enthalpy at 38 OC = 150.66 KJ / Kg of air
Enthalpy at 28 OC = 89.95 KJ / Kg of air
Enthalpy = 60.708 KJ/Kg of air
Kcal to remove = 500 X T X 1000 Kcal/hr
= 500 X 11 X 1000
= 55, 00,000 Kcal / hr
= 55, 00,000 X 4.186 KJ / hr
=23023000 KJ / hr
Air required in Kg/hr = 23023000 (KJ / hr) / [ Enthalpy
(KJ / Kg of air)]
=23023000 / 60.708
=379241.6156 Kg / hr
= 379242 Kg / hr
Sp. Volume (at 280 OC WBT) = 0.8860 m3 / Kg
Validation by using ANSYS 16 ft x 16 ft Model (C4) > Static Structural (C5) > Solution (C6) >
Object Name
Equivalent Stress
Total Deformation
Maximum Principal
Stress
Maximum Shear
Stress
State
Solved
Scope
Scoping Method
Geometry Selection
Geometry
All Bodies
Definition
Type
Equivalent (von-Mises) Stress
Total Deformation
Maximum Principal Stress
Maximum Shear Stress
By
Time
Display Time
Last
Calculate Time
History
Yes
Results
No.
Parameter reference
Units
Cooling tower (CT)
1.
Dry bulb temperature
°C
29
2.
Wet bulb temperature
°C
28
3.
CT inlet temperature
°C
42
Model (C4) > Static Structural (C5) > Solution (C6) > Total Deformation > Image
Figure-11 Total deformation
Model (C4) > Static Structural (C5) > Solution (C6) > Maximum Shear Stress > Image
Figure-12 Maximum shear stress
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Worksheet of key technical specifications
No.
Parameter
Units
Cooling tower Reference
1.
Type of cooling tower
Counter Flow Natural Draft
2.
Number of tower
1
3.
Number of cells per tower
1
4.
Water flow
m3/hr
500
5.
Pumping power
kW
–
6.
Pumping head
m
–
7.
Fan power
kW
0.375
8.
Design hot water temperature
0C
42
9.
Design cold-water temperature
0C
31
10.
Design wet bulb temperature
0C
28
Use Average
Yes
Yes
Identifier
Results
Minimum
3.3245e-011
MPa
0. mm
-3.1223
MPa
1.8778e-
011 MPa
Maximum
30.547 MPa
529.4 mm
30.579 MPa
15.661
MPa
Information
Time
1. s
Load Step
1
Substep
1
Iteration Number
1
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Prototype – 3 ft x 3 ft
Figure-13 Prototype 3 ft x 3 ft (Presently at MMCOE, Pune-52)
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Cost Comparison
Pultruded Gratings with M.S. & S.S. for the quantity of 100 sq. Meters
Various Costs in Rs.
Material used for the Gratings
GRP
M.S.
S.S.
Raw Material Wt., Kg.
1150
4500
4550
Raw Material Cost
230000
90000
500500
Galvanizing Cost
Na
45000
Na
Welding Charges
Na
54000
182000
Accessories / Hardware
250
300
1400
Transortation Cost
2000
2000
2000
Installation Charges
1600
3300
4000
Total =
235000
199100
694450
Total Life, Years
20
5
15
Life Cycle per year
11750
39820
46297
Cost in a span 0f 20 years
235000
796400
925940
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Conclusion
Structural Design: Model is analysed by using ANSYS software and it is observed that stresses induced in the model are within permissible limits.
Thermal Design: According to case study even though the material of the structure is changed thermal properties/design does not get much affected.
Weight of the proposed structure is considerably reduced and it is compact.
Aesthetical design is improved.
Life cycle of the structure increases with the reduced cost.
Hence, it will be preferred to use the Pultruded FRP Cooling Tower over conventional cooling towers.
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References
Hand book Bureau of Energy Efficiency
Power Plant Engineering by Prof. D.K.Chavan, Std. Book House, New Delhi.
Power Plant Engineering by R.K.Rajput.
Mechanical Design by Shigley, Mcgrawhill Publication Shivaraman T. Shiriram Towertech Ltd. Selection and
Design of Cooling towers www.shiriramtowertech.com
www.compositecooling.com/images/frpcomponents.pdf ASHRAE Handbook