Flowsheet Lecture
Flowsheet Lecture
Faculty of Engineering
Petrochemicals Engineering
Flow sheets
March 2010
Lecture Outline
1.
2.
3.
4.
Introduction
Block Flow Diagram (BFD)
Process Flow Diagram (PFD)
Piping and instrumentation Diagram
(P&ID)
5. Other Diagrams
1. Introduction
Sketches and drawings are the
engineer's own pictures.
To describe a process, an engineer
must:
sketch equipment,
show how they are interconnected,
and show the process flows and
operating conditions
Properties
1. Operations shown by blocks
2. Major flow lines shown with arrows giving direction of flow
3. Flow goes from left to right whenever possible
4. Light stream (gases) toward top with heavy stream (liquids
and solids) toward bottom
5. Critical information unique to process supplied
6. If lines cross, then the horizontal line is continuous and the
vertical line is broken.
7. Simplified material balance provided
Equipment symbols
Equipment Symbols
Equipment Codes
Equipment Codes
Streams Flags
Where is E-102?
What is E-102?
What may be the problem?
The effluent is mixture of liquid and gases, so the cooling is not efficient, beside the condensation
problems.
So???
Use two exchangers instead: E-10and E-10.., one for cooling and steam generation (reactor
effluent boiler), and the second uses cooling water to reach the required temperature (reactor
effluent condenser).
Operating conditions T, P
Stream flows
Equipment locations
Pipe routing
a. Pipe lengths
b. Pipe fittings
What to include:
5. Additional Diagrams
Utility flowsheet
Vessel sketches
Structural diagrams
Support diagrams
Plot plans
Elevation diagrams
5. Additional Diagrams
Utility Flow
Diagram
Comparison
Note the details that were added through the development of
flowsheet from BFD to P&ID(for the distillation tower for example)
:
1. Block Flow Diagram (BFD): The column was shown as a part of one of the
three process blocks.
2. Process Flow Diagram (PFD): The column was shown as the following set
of individual equipment: a tower, condenser, reflux drum, reboiler, reflux
pumps, and associated process controls.
3. Piping and Instrumentation Diagram (P&ID): The column was shown as
a comprehensive diagram that includes additional details such as pipe sizes,
utility streams, sample taps, numerous indicators, and so on. It is the only unit
operation on the diagram.
References
1. E.E. Ludwig, Applied Process Design
for Chemical and Petrochemical
Plants, Third edition, Vol. 1, 1999.
2. J.R. Couper, Chemical Process
Design, 2nd edition, 2010.
3. R. Turton,Analysis, Synthesis and
Design of Chemical Process, 2002