Heat Integration: Pinch Method and Network Design
Heat Integration: Pinch Method and Network Design
Heat Integration
Pinch Method and Network Design
Dr. Rajashekhar Pendyala
Chemical Engineering Department
University Teknologi PETRONAS
Pinch Technology
Pinch represents a distinct thermodynamic break in the system
and that, for minimum energy requirements, heat should not be
transferred across the pinch
Two-Stream Problem
Heating and cooling two streams from source to target
temperatures
where
m = mass flow rate, kg/s;
Cp = average specific heat capacity between Ts and Tt, kJ kg-1oC-1
Change in Enthalpy
Four-Stream Problem
Problem of recovering heat between four process streams
Two hot streams that require cooling and two cold streams
that must be heated
The process data for the streams
Four-Stream Problem
The heat load shown is the total heat required to heat or cool
the stream from the source to the target temperature
There is clearly scope for energy integration between these four
streams
The stream temperatures are such that heat can be transferred
from the hot to the cold streams
The task is to find the best arrangement of heat exchangers to
achieve the target temperatures
Plot (a) shows changes in the enthalpy of the streams, it does not
matter where a particular curve is plotted on the enthalpy axis, as
long as the curve runs between the correct temperatures
This means that where more than one stream appears in a
temperature interval, the stream heat capacities can be added to form
a composite curve, as shown in Plot (b)
The composite curve for the hot streams and the composite curve for
the cold streams are drawn with a minimum temperature difference
(the displacement between the curves, of 10oC)
This implies that in any of the exchangers to be used in the network,
the temperature difference between the streams will not be less than
10oC
Cascading the heat from one interval to the next implies that the
temperature difference is such that the heat can be transferred
between the hot and cold streams
The presence of a negative value in the column indicates that the
temperature gradient is in the wrong direction and that the exchange
is not thermodynamically possible
137.5
The pinch occurs at the heat flow where the cascade is zero
The process streams are drawn as horizontal lines, with the stream
numbers shown in square boxes
Hot streams are drawn at the top of the grid and flow from left to
right
The cold streams are drawn at the bottom and flow from right to left
Grid Representation
The stream heat capacities CP
are shown in a column at the
end of the stream lines
Heat exchangers are drawn as
two circles connected by a
vertical line
The circles connect the two
streams between which heat is
being exchanged, that is, the
streams that would flow
through the actual exchanger
Heaters and coolers can be
drawn as a single circle,
connected to the appropriate
utility
The vertical dotted lines represent the pinch and separate the
grid into the regions above and below the pinch
Network design
The proposed network for maximum energy recovery
Summary
1. Divide the problem at the pinch.
2. Design away from the pinch.
3. Above the pinch match streams adjacent to the pinch,
meeting the restriction:
Questions?
Thank You
REFERENCES
1. Smith R., Chemical Process Design, Mc Graw Hill, New York,
1995.
2. Linnhoff, B. et al, User Guide on Energy Efficiency through
Process Integration, IchemE Rugby, England, 1994.