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Glitsch Ballast valve tray

A correlation for valve tray entrainment flooding that has gained respect and popularity throughout the industry is the Glitsch Equation 13 (Glitsch, Inc., Ballast Tray Design Manual, 6th ed., 1993 ... [Pg.36]

Manufacturers of valve trays, such as Koch-Glitsch, Inc., of Wichita, Kansas (Ballast trays and Flexitrays), and Sulzer-Chemtech (formerly Nutter Engineering Co.), of Tulsa, Oklahoma (Float Valve Trays), have prepared proprietary design manuals. Hence, only limited discussion will be given here. As for bubble-cap trays, design methods follow those for sieve trays. The vapor capacity chart (Figure 12.29) covers valve trays, as does the alternate method of Kister and Haas. Information on liquid entrainment is proprietary, but measurements have been made by Fractionation Research, Inc. Because of the vapor flow reversal, one would not expect entrainment from valve trays to be greater than that from sieve trays. Liquid capacity considerations follow exactly those for sieve trays. [Pg.1020]

Figure 2.16. Single-pass Glitsch ballast tray with A-l valves. (Courtesy of F. L. Glitsch and Sons.). Figure 2.16. Single-pass Glitsch ballast tray with A-l valves. (Courtesy of F. L. Glitsch and Sons.).
Figure 10-1. (A) Valve assembly for Glitsch A-1 valve, and (B) small Gitsch A-1 ballast tray ... Figure 10-1. (A) Valve assembly for Glitsch A-1 valve, and (B) small Gitsch A-1 ballast tray ...

See other pages where Glitsch Ballast valve tray is mentioned: [Pg.343]    [Pg.343]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.111]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.123 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.123 ]




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