Process Equipment Design & Unit Operation Economics
Process Equipment Design & Unit Operation Economics
Design
Section 9 Section 9
Process Economics Process Economics
Section 28 Section 25
Materials of Materials of
Construction Construction
Plant Design
Plant design
includes all engineering aspects involved in the
development of a new, modified, or expanded commercial
process in a chemical or biochemical plant.
Process engineering
used in connection with economic evaluation and general
economic analyses of commercial processes
Process design
actual design of the equipment and facilities necessary for
providing the desired products and services
Plant Design
General Overall Design Considerations
2. FLOWSHEET DEVELOPMENT
Chemical engineer creates one or more solutions
Different feeds and intermediates
Performs mass and energy balances
Plant Design
General Overall Design Considerations
3. COMPUTER AIDED DESIGN
Allows rapid calculations, large storage
Allow examination of effect that various design
variables will have on the process or plant design
more rapidly than manual calculation
Use of simulation programs
Can regress experimental data obtained in the
laboratory or pilot plant for empirical or theoretical
curve fitting
Use of spreadsheet programs
Plant Design
General Overall Design Considerations
4. COST ESTIMATION
As final process design is completed it becomes
possible to make accurate cost estimations
Pre-design cost estimation
Provide basis for company management to decide to
infuse further capital
Plant Design
General Overall Design Considerations
6. OPTIMUM DESIGN
Cost Minimization
Profit Maximization
Capacity Maximization
Plant Design
General Overall Design Considerations
6. OPTIMUM DESIGN
Several alternative methods can be used for any
given process or operation
Formaldehyde
Catalytic dehydrogenation of methanol
Controlled oxidation of natural gas
Direct reaction between CO and H2 under special
conditions of catalyst, T and P
Plant Design
General Overall Design Considerations
6. OPTIMUM DESIGN
• raw materials
• operating labor
• direct supervisory and clerical labor
• utilities
• maintenance and repairs
• operating supplies
• lab charges
• patents and royalties
• catalysts and solvents
Fixed Charges
• depreciation
• local taxes
• insurance
• rent
Plant Overhead Cost
•hospital and medical
•general engineering
•safety services
•cafeteria and recreation facilities
•payroll and overhead
•janitorial services
•warehouses
•shipping and receiving
Materials of Fabrication Selection
Corrosion – chemical or electrochemical attack
choose combination of metals that are close as possible in
the galvanic series
corrosion rate → affected by pH
aluminum and zinc dissolves rapidly in either acidic and
basic solutions
oxidizing agents
powerful accelerator of corrosion
cathodic protection
widely used in the protection of underground pipes and
tanks from external soil corrosion and in water systems.
Materials of Fabrication Selection
1. CHEMICAL FACTOR
Resistance to corrosion
Table in Peters et al., corrosion resistance
Table of Materials of Construction in Chemical
Engineers Handbook
Reagent → Vessel material
Process Equipment Design
Factors considered in the selection of materials of
construction for process vessels
2. PHYSICAL FACTOR
Ability to resist expansion
Material properties: elasticity, machinability,
porosity, hardness, softness, conductivity of heat
and elasticity, etc.
Process Equipment Design
Factors considered in the selection of materials of
construction for process vessels
3. ECONOMIC FACTOR
Cost of Material of Construction
Fabrication cost
Process Equipment Design
Pressure Vessels
Design Equation
Material Selection
Material Selection
Material Selection
Pressure Vessels
Type
Riveted or bolted
Welded
Standards
ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code
British Code or British Standards (BS)
(West) German Code (A. D. Merkblätter)
Variable
Working or Operating
Design
Design Considerations
Pressure
Internal
External
Temperature
Material of Construction
Design Stress
Welded Joint Efficiency
Corrosion Allowance
Design Loads
Major
Subsidiary
Minimum Practical Wall Thickness
Welded Joint Efficiency
Single-welded butt joint with bonding strips
0.90 for fully radiographed
0.80 for spot examined (radiographed)
0.65 if not radiographed
Double-welded butt joints
1.00 for fully radiographed
0.85 for spot examined (radiographed)
0.70 if not radiographed
Welded Joint Efficiency
In general, for spot examined (in the absence of
available precise data)
0.85 for electric resistance weld
0.80 for lap welded
0.60 for single-butt welded
1.0 for seamless shells and heads
Design Equations
• Shells
– Cylindrical
– Spherical
• Heads/Closures/Ends
– Flat
• Plates
• Formed ends
– Domed
• Types
– Pierced
– Unpierced
Design Equations
– Domed
• Hemispherical
• Ellipsoidal
• Torispherical (or dished ends)
• Conical
Design Equations (Internal
Pressure)
• Cylindrical Shells
P ri where t 0.5ri
t Cc or P 0.385SEJ
SEJ 0.6 P
1
2 where t 0.5ri
SEJ P
t ri ri Cc or P 0.385SEJ
SEJ P
Design Equations (Internal
Pressure)
• Spherical Shell
P ri
t Cc where t 0.356ri
2SEJ 0.2 P or P 0.665SEJ
1
3 where t 0.356ri
2SEJ 2 P
t ri ri Cc or P 0.665SEJ
2SEJ P
Design Equation (Internal
Pressure)
PDa
t Cc
2SEJ 0.2 P
Design Equation (Internal
Pressure)
• Torispherical Head
0.885 PLa
t Cc
SEJ 0.1P
where Knuckle radius 6% Crown radius
3t
Design Equations (Internal
Pressure)
PDc 1
t Cc
2 SEJ P cos
Design Equation (Internal
Pressure)
• Conical Head (at cone-cylinder
junction)
C s PDc
t Cc
2 SEJ P
• Design Temperature
• Corrosion Allowance
Design Pressure
• Allowance is either 10% of max operating P or
70–175 kPa which ever is greater. Design P =
max operating P + Allowance
• When no data is available for max operating P,
Design P = normal operating P + 175 kPa
• For vessels operating at 0.32–1 atm and 316–
538oC, Design P = 377 kPa
• For vacuum operation, design P is 200 kPa
outside and full vacuum inside
Design Temperature
Tubing
– Outside diameter
– Wall Thickness/Gauge
Pipe and Tubing
• Pipe • Tubing
– Heavy walled – Thin walled
– In moderate length – In coils of several
of 20-40 feet hundred feet
– Slightly rough – Very smooth wall
– Can be screwed, – Connected by
welded or flanged compression,
– Made by welding, flaring or soldering
casting or piercing – Made by extrusion
– Relatively large or cold-drawned
Friction Factor Calculation
• Conduit Configuration
• Friction Factor
• Temperature Correction
Conduit Configuration
• Diameter for circular conduits
• Equivalent Diameter for non-circular conduits
(Turbulent flow only)
2
2 f Fanning v Le f Darcy v 2 Le
F F
gc D 2 gc D
f Darcy 4 f Fanning
Moody Diagram (Newtonian)
Affinity Laws
[Constant Impeller Speed]
• Flow
Q1 D1
Q2 D2
• Head
2
H1 D1
H2 D2
• Power
3
BHP1 D1
BHP2 D2
PUMP CURVES
Gas Motive Devices
• Fans
– Low pressure service of up to 0.5 psi
– Volume service of up to 130,000 ft3/min
– Gas compressibility usually assumed
negligible
• Blowers
– Pressure service of up to 1.5 psi
– Volume service of up to 200,000 ft3/min
• Compressors
– For large volume and higher pressure
service
Process Equipment
Design
Problem Solving
Problem No. 17
Four inch (4.0 inch) schedule 40 steel pipes are to be
used to transport high pressure steam. The pipe joints are
to be butt-welded. The safe working fiber stress for butt
welded pipes is 457.1 kg/cm2. The maximum steam
pressure, in kg/cm2, the pipes can handle is
a. 50.8 kg/cm2
b. 18.28 kg/cm2
c. 25 kg/cm2
d. 55 kg/cm2
Problem Solving
Problem No. 18
A spherical carbon storage tank for ammonia has an
inside diameter of 30 ft. All joints are butt welded with
backing strip. If the tank is to be used at a working
pressure of 50 psig and a temperature of 80 ̊ F, estimate
the necessary wall thickness. Assume no corrosion
allowance is necessary. Efficiency is 80% and allowable
tensile strength is 13,700 psi.
a. 1/2 in
b. 1/4 in
c. 7/16 in
d. 5/16 in
Problem Solving
Problem No. 19
A reactor will operate at 300 psi and 600 ̊ F. Height =
12 ft; crown radius = 66 in; diameter = 6 ft; double
welded butt joint, efficiency = 80%. Allowable tensile
strength of material is 12,000 psi. The thickness of the
shell is
a. 1 and 3/16 in
b. 1 and 1/16 in
c. 2 in
d. 1 and ¼ in
Problem Solving
Problem No. 20
A reactor will operate at 300 psi and 600 ̊ F. Height =
12 ft; crown radius = 66 in; diameter = 6 ft; double
welded butt joint, efficiency = 80%. Allowable tensile
strength of material is 12,000 psi. The thickness of the
head is
a. 5/2 in
b. 1/2 in
c. 3/4 in
a. 3/2 in
Problem Solving
Problem No. 22
A water tank 30 ft. in diameter has a thick steel plate
available at 3/8 in thick. Assume the allowable stress of
steel is 15,000 psi and a joint efficiency of 80%.
Provide a corrosion allowance of 1/16 inch. The
maximum height of the water tank is
a. 84.3 ft
b. 43.6 ft
c. 68.05 ft
a. 48.03 ft
Problem Solving
Problem No. 15
A chemical engineer was commissioned to design a vertical
cylindrical tank with a flat bottom and a conical roof. The tank
must be able to hold a maximum of 4,500 m3 of water for
firefighting purposes. Ease of climbing the tank and bearing
capacity allows a maximum height of 16.5 m from the bottom of
the tank up to the rim of the tank cylinder. Normal working
practice dictates that the maximum working capacity of the tank is
90% of the total tank volume. The tank roof has a 10% incline.
Suitable steel plates available for constructing the tank come in
size 4’x8’ sheets. The number of steel plates needed is…
Problem Solving
Problem No. 15
10 ft
20 ft
20 ft
The total force, in lbf, exerted by the water on the base of the
tank is most nearly
a. 500,000
b. 520,000
c. 550,000
d. 590,000
Problem Solving
Problem No. 21
A horizontal cylindrical tank is used for the storage of motor
gasoline in the bulk plant of an oil company in Pandacan. The tank
has an inside diameter of 3 m and an inside length 10 m. The
suction line of the tank is located 30 cm from the tank bottom to
avoid sucking out the sludge. To prevent overfilling, the maximum
height of liquid in the tank is not made to exceed 90% of the
vertical height of the tank. The working capacity of the tank in
kiloliters is
a. 36.23
b. 63.32
c. 45.23
a. 68.32
Unit Operation
Economics
Problem Solving
Problem No. 13
A smelting furnace operating at 2,400˚F is to be insulated on the
outside to reduce heat losses and save on energy. The furnace wall
consists of a ½ inch steel plate and 4-inch thick refractory inner
lining. During operation without outer insulation, the outer surface
of the steel plate exposed to air has a temperature of 300 ˚F.
Ambient air temperature is at 90˚F. Operation is 300 days per
year. Thermal conductivities in BTU/hr-ft-˚F are: steel plate = 26;
refractory = 1; insulation to be installed=0.025. The combined
radiation and convection loss to air irrespective of material
exposed is 3 BTU/hr-ft2.˚F, annual fixed charge is 20% of the
initial installation cost. If heat energy is P5.00 per 10,000 BTU and
installed cost of insulation is P100/in-ft2 of area, the optimum
thickness of the outer insulation that should be is…
Problem Solving
Problem No. 11
A multiple effect evaporator produces 10,000 kg of salt from a
20% brine solution per day. One kg of steam evaporates 0.7 N
kg water in N effects at a cost of P25/1000 kg of steam. The cost
of the first effect is P450,000 and the additional effects at
P300,000 each. The life of the evaporator is 10 years with no
salvage value. The annual average cost of repair and
maintenance is 10% and taxes and insurance is 5%. Assume 300
operating days per year. The optimum number of effects for
minimum annual cost is
a. 3 effects
b. 5 effects
c. 4 effects
d. 2 effects
Problem Solving
Problem No. 12
A process requires 20,000 lb/hr of saturated steam at 115 psig.
This is purchased from a neighboring plant at P18.00 per short ton
and the total energy content rate (mechanical) in the steam may
be valued at P7.5x10-6 per BTU. Hours of operation per year are
7200. The friction loss in the line is given by the following equation:
a. 45%
b. 60%
c. 50%
d. 40%