1. Heating Load Components
Tank heating applications require sizing heaters for multiple load components. The total heater capacity must handle both transient (start-up) and steady-state (operating) conditions. The governing case determines the final heater size.
Start-Up
QS = Initial heat-up
Heat required to bring cold liquid and tank from ambient to operating temperature.
Operating
QO = Steady-state
Continuous heat required to maintain temperature against losses and process loads.
Surface Losses
QLS = Heat loss
Continuous heat loss through tank walls to ambient; reduced by insulation.
Governing Case Selection
The heater must be sized for the larger of start-up or operating requirements:
2. Start-Up Heating
Start-up heating must raise the liquid and tank from initial (cold) temperature to operating temperature within a specified time. This includes heating the liquid mass, the tank thermal mass, and compensating for surface losses during heat-up.
Heat to Raise Liquid Temperature (QA)
Heat to Raise Tank Temperature (QC)
Start-Up Power Requirement
The start-up kW combines the energy requirements divided by heat-up time, plus surface losses at operating temperature:
Worked Example: Start-Up Calculation
Given:
- 500 gallons of water (SG=1.0, Cp=1.0)
- Initial temp: 60 F, Target: 180 F (ΔT = 120 F)
- Steel tank weighing 500 lbs (Cp = 0.12)
- Desired heat-up time: 2 hours
- Surface loss at operating: 5 kW
Solution:
QA = (500 x 8.345 x 1.0 x 1.0 x 120) / 3,412 = 146.7 kWh
QC = (500 x 0.12 x 120) / 3,412 = 2.1 kWh
QS = (146.7 + 2.1) / 2 + 5 = 74.4 + 5 = 79.4 kW
3. Operating Loads
Once at operating temperature, the heater must maintain temperature against continuous losses and process loads. Operating loads include surface heat losses, makeup liquid heating, and work product heating.
Makeup Liquid Heating (Qwo)
When cold makeup liquid enters the tank, it must be heated to operating temperature:
Work Product Heating (Qws)
In processes like plating, cleaning, or heat treating, cold parts are immersed and must be heated:
Total Operating Load
4. Surface Heat Losses
Heat continuously escapes through tank surfaces to the surrounding environment. Surface losses depend on temperature difference, surface area, and insulation level. Insulation dramatically reduces these losses.
Surface Loss Calculation
Surface Loss Coefficients
Approximate U values for still air conditions (indoor):
| Insulation Level | U (BTU/hr-ft2-F) | Relative Loss |
|---|---|---|
| Uninsulated (bare metal) | 2.5 | 100% |
| 1" mineral wool | 0.50 | 20% |
| 2" mineral wool | 0.30 | 12% |
| 3" mineral wool | 0.22 | 9% |
| 4" mineral wool | 0.18 | 7% |
Wind and Location Effects
Outdoor installations with wind exposure have higher losses. Multiply the above U values by:
- Still air (indoor): 1.0x (base case)
- Light breeze (5 mph): 1.3x
- Moderate wind (15 mph): 1.6x
- High wind (25+ mph): 2.0x
Surface Area Estimation
For cylindrical tanks:
5. Heater Sizing & Selection
Final heater sizing combines calculated loads with safety factors and practical considerations. Select heaters from standard sizes that meet or exceed the calculated requirement.
Safety Factor Application
Standard Heater Sizes
Round up to next standard heater size:
- Small (under 10 kW): 1, 2, 3, 4.5, 6, 7.5, 9 kW
- Medium (10-50 kW): 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 36, 45, 50 kW
- Large (over 50 kW): 60, 75, 100, 125, 150, 200 kW
Heater Type Selection
| Heater Type | Application | Considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Flanged Immersion | Tanks, vessels, process fluids | Direct contact, high efficiency, easy replacement |
| Screw Plug | Small tanks, pipes, fittings | Compact, NPT threaded connection |
| Over-the-Side | Open tanks, portable heating | No tank penetration, removable |
| Circulation Heater | Flow-through applications | External to tank, good for viscous fluids |
Watt Density Considerations
Watt density (W/in2) must be appropriate for the fluid to prevent local overheating:
- Water: Up to 80 W/in2
- Light oils: 20-40 W/in2
- Heavy oils: 10-20 W/in2
- Caustics: 15-25 W/in2
- Waxes/tars: 5-10 W/in2
Flow-Through Heating
For continuous flow heating (not batch tanks):
Liquid Properties Reference
| Liquid | Cp (BTU/lb-F) | SG @ 60F | Max Watt Density (W/in2) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Water | 1.00 | 1.00 | 80 |
| 50% Ethylene Glycol | 0.85 | 1.07 | 60 |
| Light Oil (SAE 10) | 0.50 | 0.85 | 30 |
| Medium Oil (SAE 30) | 0.48 | 0.88 | 25 |
| Heavy Oil (SAE 50) | 0.45 | 0.92 | 20 |
| Fuel Oil #2 | 0.47 | 0.87 | 25 |
| Fuel Oil #6 | 0.40 | 0.95 | 12 |
| Caustic (50% NaOH) | 0.80 | 1.53 | 20 |
| Sulfuric Acid (98%) | 0.35 | 1.84 | 15 |
| Paraffin Wax | 0.50 | 0.90 | 8 |
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