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Most unfired heat exchangers, operating with fluids that do not change phase, are of baffled shell-and-tube design, by which is meant that one of the fluids flows within straight or hairpin-bent tubes, whereas the other flow between and around those tubes, within an ah-confining shell, being guided in its path by baffles. These baffles serve to hold the tubes apart, so that the shell-side fluid can flow between them; they also control the path of that fluid to some extent.

Many different designs are used; the choice depends on the relative importance, for the fluids and the application in question, of such factors as the following

  • Capital (construction) cost
  • Running (especially pumping) cost
  • Clean ability
  • Tendency to corrosion
  • Pressure differences to be sustained
  • Dangers associated with leakage
  • Temperature range, and liability to thermal stress

Tendency to tube vibration and subsequent fatigue