BITS Pilani: Module 2: Flowsheet Synthesis Lecture-5
BITS Pilani: Module 2: Flowsheet Synthesis Lecture-5
Pilani Campus
Nandana Chakinala
Department of Chemical Engineering
Revisit
2
Typical input-output structure
• HDA
In many petro chemical processes and also other processing industries, the processing
cost is about 30 to80 or, even 100% of raw the materials cost
Thumb rule: Recover 99% of all valuable material
Some reactant could be lost – air, water → Cheap reactants
Purge and recycle streams – Gaseous reactants with impurities, gaseous by-product
Gaseous reactant are fed in excess to force complete higher conversion of toluene
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Contd..
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Decisions to be made at I/P-
O/P structure
1. Do we need to purify feed stream?
2. Should we remove a reversible by-product
from reactor effluent?
3. Is a recycle or purge stream needed?
4. How many product streams are required?
5. Should we recover and recycle unreacted
reactants?
6. Listing and identification of design variables
and economic trade off associated with these
variables
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1. Purification of feed streams
– Designing of pre-purification systems
– We may not know the kind of separation for purification
– Is a recycle or purge stream needed?
• Guidelines for decision
– Feed impurity not an inert, and present in large quantities,
remove it
– Feed impurity in gas feed: consider feeding the process
– If impurity in liquid streams and also a by-product, feed the
process through separations
– If impurity in liquid stream and form azeotrope, feed the
process with impurity
– If impurity is easy to be separated from products than
reactants, feed it to process
– If impurity is catalyst poison, remove it
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Economic trade off with feed
purification
– Design a separation system : capital and operating cost
– Better selectivity, better yield, reduction of load and
hence cost of separations
– Process specific no general guideline
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2. Recovery and recycle of by-products
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3. Gas recycle and Purge
– What reactants can be characterized as gas- light ends criterion
for light end
– To liquefy a gas/vapor stream – compress and cool (refrigeration)
– Definition: Light component is one which condenses using cooling
water when compressed at moderate pressures
– Propylene is basis for light ends (B.P is -48oC)
– If any component boils at temperature lesser than b.p of
propylene , we call it as light end and we go for recycle and purge
streams
– No recovery and recycle if reactant is cheap (water/air)
– Excess of these components are used – specify excess. Use of
necessarily large quantities could cause burden on equipment and
increasing processing cost
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4. Number of product streams
– What is the destination of products/by-products?
– What is ultimate fate?
• Thumb rule: Never separate and remix two streams
• List all the components that leave the reactor
• Component classification
• Gaseous by products and feed impurities
• Gaseous unreacted reactants/inerts
• Reaction intermediates, azeotropes with reactants, reversible by-products
• Primary products
• Valuable by-products
• By- products (Fuel) – Furnace
• By products (waste treatment) – ETP
• Gaseous / liquid reactants not recovered / recycled – exit the process
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
Example
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Evaluation of the flowsheet
• Thumb rule: Make certain that all products/by-products/inerts
leave the process
• Thumb rule: Never separate and remix two streams
• List all the components that leave the reactor
• Component classification
• Gaseous by products and feed impurities - vent
• Gaseous unreacted reactants/inerts –Recycle and purge
• Reaction intermediates, azeotropes with reactants, reversible by-products - Recycle
• Primary products – Packing and further processing
• Valuable by-products - Packing and further processing
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Decisions to be made at I/P-
O/P structure- Revisit
1. Do we need to purify feed stream?
2. Should we remove a reversible by-product
from reactor effluent?
3. Is a recycle or purge stream needed?
4. How many product streams are required?
5. Should we recover and recycle unreacted
reactants?
6. Listing and identification of design variables
and economic trade off associated with these
variables
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6. Design variables, overall material
balance and stream costs
• To achieve total material balance, and get stream costs, we must
assess whether problem definition is complete or some
information is missing (design variables)
• Design variables add “degrees of freedom” to process design
• Hypothetical process: Single product, complete conversion of
reactants
• If material balance is not unique- stream costs will also be not
unique
• Do material balance and develop stream costs model in terms of
unknown design variables and eventually look for optimum value
of these variables
• In case of processes with multiple/ complex reactions, there will
always be a correlation of the product distribution in terms of
process variables
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Design variables
• Conversion of limiting reactant
• Molar ratio of reactants
• Reactor T
• Reactor P
• Catalyst
• Temperature: if the activation energies of all the reactants are
similar, the product distribution will not be influenced by T
• Pressure: Liquid phase reactions are relatively insensitive to
variation in pressure
• Gas phase reactions are also insensitive to P, provided_____
• Plug flow reactor: the correlation of limiting reactant conversion is
w.r.t space velocity which helps in deciding size of reactor
• Reactor configuration: For preliminary designs, use same
configuration as chemist
• Kinetic data: we cannot evaluate at initial stage the variation in
product distribution with reactor configuration
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Design variables
• Preliminary calculation should warrant additional effort for reactor
design
• Other variables: whether all reactants recovered and recycled?
Use of gas recycle/purge stream
• % recovery: Molar ratio of reactants → excess reactant fed→
amounts of inerts→ recycle to purge ratio → molar composition
of recycle/purge
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Summary
• Level-2 variables: Reactor conversion, molar ratio of reactants,
reactor T, P, excess reactants, recycle/purge
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Procedure for developing
overall material balances
Start with the specified production rate
Calculate the inlet & outlet flows for the impurities entering with
the reactant streams
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Limitations
• Assume 100% recovery of all valuable materials
• Find neighbourhood or group of optimum values of design
variables that decide inlet/outlet flows then to determine the
losses
• Processes having multiple valuable products
• Eg: chlorination of methane
• Amine process
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Selectivity & Reaction
Stoichiometry
• For HDA Process:
Toluene + H2 → Benzene + CH4
2 Benzene → Diphenyl + H2
S = selectivity= moles of benzene at reactor outlet/moles of toluene
converted
PB
FFT = Eqn(1)
S
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Contd..
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Contd..
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
H2 balance
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Contd..
Purge:
• If we feed an excess amount of H2 (as some H2
goes into purge), FE into the process, this H2 will
leave with the purge stream
• The total amount of H2 fed to the process
FH 2 = FE +
PB
(1 + S ) =?yFH .FG Eqn(4)
2S
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Contd..
PB
• Required H2 = In 1st Rxn
S
• H2 Produced = PB . 1 − S In 2nd Rxn
S 2
• H2 Fed PB PB 1 − S
= − .
S S 2
PB PB
= + .S
2S 2S
PB
= .(1 + S )
2 S
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Contd..
= (1 − yFH )FG +
PB Eqn(5)
PCH 4
S
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Contd..
PG = FE + (1-yFH )FG +
PB Eqn(6)
S
• Normally use the purge composition of the
reactant, yPH as design variable
FE H 2 moles in purge
y PH = = Eqn(7)
PG purge flow rate
Contd..
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Thank You
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Back up slides
CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
Numerical Problem on
Selectivity vs Conversion
• The 1967 AIChE student contest problem gives
data showing how the selectivity (S = moles of
benzene at reactor exit per mole of toluene
converted) depends on the reactor conversion.
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Contd..
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
Solution
• 1 - s vs 1 – x
• log (1 – s) vs log (1 – x)
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
S vs x in Arithmetic Graph
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
S vs x on Logarithmic Graph
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
Analysis of Graphs
• Graphs:
1. S vs x Nonlinear
2. (1-S) vs (1-x) Nonlinear
3. log S vs log x Nonlinear and Small Range
(Not accurate)
4. log(1-S) vs log(1-x) Linear and Wider Range
(Accurate)
Contd..
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
Contd..
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
Contd..
For the 4th Graph log (1-S) vs log (1-x): (i.e., 1-S
vs 1-x on log-log plot):
• Slope = -1.59602 and Intercept = -2.47319
• For y = m xn ; log y = log m + n logx
• So, log m = -2.47319; m = 3.3636 x10-3 and n = -1.59602
• So the final relation is (1 − S ) = 3.3636 10 −3 (1 − x) −1.59602
0.0033636
S = 1−
(1 − x)1.59602
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
Contd.
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
Contd..
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CE 1705/1701 Process Plant Design
Enlarged View
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