13 Heat Integration in A Crude Distillation Unit Using Pinch Analysis Concepts
13 Heat Integration in A Crude Distillation Unit Using Pinch Analysis Concepts
Pumparound Design
Number of Pumparound Sections Location of Pumparound Sections Pumparound Section Heat Duty
Pumparound Section Heat Recovery at higher temperature Maximum heat recoverable Heat of vaporization of the liquid from the tray above the pumparound section Trade-off:
n Pumparound Duty p Fractionation above the pumparound
Fractionation Quality:
Internal reflux Gap and Overlap
Pumparound Section
Max Heat Duty at PA:
Zero Internal Liquid Reflux above PA return.
By Simulation:
Internal Liquid Reflux above PA return Enthalpy Difference at bubble and dew point; Simulate the tower specifying near Zero Internal Reflux above PA, varying PA duty.
In all studies, products specification were a target. However, stripping steam optimization was not part of this present work.
Sketch
LVGO NAPHTHA TPA KEROSENE MPA LIGHT DIESEL HVGO BPA HEAVY DIESEL SLOP WAX MVGO
REDUCED CRUDE
VACUUM RESIDUE
Temperature ( C)
10
10
Theoretical stage
15
Theoretical stage
15
20
20
25
25
35
35
These graphics compare both liquid internal reflux and temperature profile at atmospheric column, considering BPA is already defined. Data refering to Max PA are at near zero liquid reflux, while the other data refer to maximum liquid internal reflux above Mid PA section.
Simulation Basis
19o API Brazilian Crude Kept Constant:
Atm Furnace Outlet Temperature Vacuum Furnace Outlet Temperature Atm Ovhd Drum Temperature Overflash Rate Number of stages
Cost basis: Brent: US$ 30.00 / bbl Fuel oil: US$ 20.60 / 106 kcal Cooling water: US$ 0.066 / m3 Equipment Cycle Life: 10 years
10
-10 30 C Overlap at 6x106 kcal/h -20 GAP5-95 Kerosene vs Naphtha -30 GAP5-95 Light Diesel vs Kerosene GAP5-95 Heavy Diesel vs Light Diesel -40 d(Gap HDxLD)/d(BPA Duty) Gap 5-95 (oC) -25
-50
-60
-70 0 -5 -10 -15 -20 Bottom Pum paround Duty (106 kcal/h)
10
0 5 C gap at 18x106 kcal/h Gap 5-95 (oC) Inflection Point at Duty = 17x106 kcal/h -40 0 -5 -10 -15 -20 -25 -30 -35 Mid Pum paround Duty (106 kcal/h)
GAP5-95 Light Diesel vs Kerosene GAP5-95 Heavy Diesel vs Light Diesel d(Gap LD x K)/d(MPA Duty)
-20
10 0 C gap at 17x106 kcal/h 0 GAP5-95 Kerosene vs Naphtha Gap 5-95 (oC) -20 -25 GAP5-95 Light Diesel vs Kerosene GAP5-95 Heavy Diesel vs Light Diesel -10 d(Gap N x K)/d(TPA Duty) Inflection Point at Duty = 18x106 kcal/h
-20
Case Study 1
BASE
16,20,0
16,14,6
Atmospheric Tower
Duties in 106 kcal/h
Base Hot Utility Cold Utility Hot Utility (Base) 9.79 66.1 0 16,20,0 10.01 64.7 + 0.22 16,14,6 5.74 60.4 - 4.05
Case 16,14,6: C; Treturn = 303 C Bottom PA: 6x106 kcal/h; Tout = 338 Pinch: HVGO; Tpinch = 312 C Bottom PA: Above the Pinch = 338 312 = 26 C (74,3%) 6 x 0,743 = 4,45x106 kcal/h ~ 4,27x106 kcal/h (4.05 + 0.22)
Atmospheric Tower
Base T optimum (C) Utility Cost (106 US$/yr) Capital Cost (106 US$/yr) Overall Cost (106 US$/yr) Savings (106 US$/yr) 26.2 8.504 6.016 14.520 0 16,20,0 14.9 7.014 6.126 13.140 1.380 16,14,6 19.2 6.644 5.789 12.432 2.088
* For Case 16,20,0 at T =19.2 C Capital Cost = 5.637x106 US$/yr slightly lower than Case 16,14,6 caused by lower approach near pinch region, but process recovery lead to much lower Utility Cost
Case Study 2
Add MVGO draw HVGO : MVGO : LVGO ~ 1 : 4 : 1 (case: MVGO) High flow rate required to change pinch location. Atmospheric column configuration constant (best result previously achieved). process to process recovery above pinch Hot and cold utility approach - Capital cost (trade-off)
16,14,6
MVGO
As pinch is occurring at MVGO (much higher flow rate than HVGO), there is a large portion of Hot Composite Curve with few variation in flow above the pinch, resulting expressive increment on Capital Cost (penalty too high).
16,14,6
MVGO
MVGO 285
If we keep pinch at HVGO, heat recovery is the same than Case 16,14,6, however the HEN approach is much higher, allowing more heat recovery.
Case Study 3
Pinch Stream Pumparound T Evaluate modifying pinch stream return temperature (if PA)
HVGO: for low 'T high flow rate (pumping need to be evaluated) How will thermodynamics respond to flow variation?
arctan(D) arctan(D)
350C
D
Hot utility
326C 314C
D
MVGO 260
MVGO 285
MVGO 200 T optimum (C) Utility Cost (106 US$/yr) Capital Cost (106 US$/yr) Overall Cost (106 US$/yr) Savings (106 US$/yr) 19.0 6.181 6.028
12.209
11.971
11.639
11.512
2.311
2.549
2.881
3.008
As HVGO flow rate increases, the HEN approach becomes higher, resulting less Capital Cost, allowing more heat integration.
Conclusion
In Case Study 1, moving duty from below to above the pinch (transfering duty from MPA to BPA) reduced Utility Cost with almost no penalty in Capital Cost. In Case Study 2, moving the pinch stream by creating a new drawoff at vacuum tower did not bring benefit initially, as the increase on Capital Cost was too high. However, appropriate flow rate definition for this new stream lead to much higher approaches (lower Capital Cost). In Case Study 3, capital cost becomes higher for lower return PA temperature (lower flow rate).
Conclusion
Appropriate variation of process streams observing thermodynamics may result in high process integration (grass root or revamp) Optimization taking into account these insights could improve the design.
Antonio V. S. de Castro, [email protected] Claudio L. M. Kuboski Carlos Ney da Fonseca Silvia Waintraub Washington de O. Geraldelli