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Hi
Thank you for subscribing to Paratherm TipSheet, a short, monthly technical email series for users of thermal fluids and hot oil systems.
TipSheet is a service of the Paratherm Corporation. The details are applicable to all heat transfer fluids in closed or vented hot-oil systems.
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At some point in any project involving a new thermal fluid system, somebody will decide that vapor pressure is an important property that should be considered in fluid selection. There will be talk of pump cavitation along with a nitrogen blanket on the expansion tank with the extra costs for high-pressure components. All of these issues will quickly be reinforced by the thermal-fluid salesman with (you guessed it ) the lowest vapor pressure.
What can be confusing is that some aromatic-based fluids have higher vapor pressure and coincidentally require more exotic sealing on pumps and valves because of VOC issues. What cuts through the confusion is that all fluid manufacturers specify Schedule 40 seamless piping, 300# flanges and some type of graphite gaskets. On the equipment side, most suppliers build their expansion tanks to ASME code regardless of the fluid chosen. So the bottom line is that vapor pressure has little effect on the overall cost of a heat transfer system.
One point that does require extra attention--don't confuse "smoke" with vapor pressure. Most thermal-fluid leaks are due to seepage through gaskets, pump seals, valve stems, etc. Regarding such seepage, what will have more of an effect than vapor pressure is whether the fluid is also a good solvent---such as many aromatic-based fluids (which, again coincidentally, typically have higher vapor pressures).
Next tip --- FLUID PROPERTIES EXPLAINED --- PART 3, HOW TO COMPARE FLUIDS -- INSIDE FILM COEFFICIENT will discuss physical and thermal properties and how to relate them to choosing fluids for specific applications. Also in the next issue, TipSheet will offer a comprehensive HEAT TRANSFER FLUID PROPERTIES technical data sheet in PDF format, combining the information from this three-part series, and more, to help you decide what's important in choosing a fluid for your application, and what's not.... Can't wait? Call us at 800-222-3611, or email info@paratherm.com
Watch for the new THERMAL FLUID PROPERTIES EXPLAINED tipsheet in the next month or so.
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