Chemical Processing-August 2008 - (Page 17) energY saVer reduce column Energy consumption Focus on five costly distillation errors and how to prevent them Distillation columns are one of the biggest energy users in plants, yet the efficiency of these towers can be extremely low. Although there are many ways to recover heat, through intercoolers and heat integration, the actual column also can be operated to make the necessary split at reduced energy consumption. Here’re five common ways distillation columns can waste energy. 1. Operating at the wrong pressure — Higher column pressure costs you the ability to separate and thus energy. Higher pressure reduces vaporization so a column must operate at higher temperature. Therefore, more energy is added to the reboiler at higher pressure than at lower pressure to get the same separation. To save energy, run column pressure at the lower end of your operating range, just high enough to cool your overhead and hydraulically move products. One way to do this is to reduce the pressure drop across the column by installing distillation trays or packing that has little differential pressure (more efficient trays also can reduce energy requirements). This allows you to run the same overhead pressure with less reboiler work. Or reduce pressure in the entire tower. For those in areas of the country that experience wide variation in outside temperature (and thus have the ability to cool better in the winter), look at seasonable adjustments in tower pressure. 2. Putting your feed in the wrong location — Tower separation is typically determined by the reboiler, condenser and feed system. Most engineers concentrate on getting the two ends, condenser and reboiler, to do the right thing but forget about the feed system itself. In some cases, where multiple feed entrances are possible, always look at the proper tray to introduce your feed. The feed location depends heavily on the composition and your final product spec. Introducing a feed at the wrong location means the trays around the feed entrance will operate inefficiently and thus require the tower to work harder, use more energy, to perform the required separation. If your feed composition changes or if it has changed since the tower was designed, run tower simulations to see if you can introduce your feed on a different tray to reduce energy cost. 3. Over-purifying your products — In a distillation column, your primary control protects the most valuable product. For example, if you have a specification of less than 5% unwanted material in the overhead liquid, you typically will set a target to achieve that. However, it’s very common for a plant to produce 2% to 3% unwanted material in shipped product even when allowed 5%. This commonly happens because operators are taught to respond immediately to results close to the limit but are less likely to make changes when the results are far below the target. Although you never want to produce off-spec material, running a distillation column far below target takes a lot more energy then running a column to produce very near the target. With the advanced control schemes and equipment available today, look at your column to determine if you can run a “tighter” specification range for a lot less energy. 4. Using too much reflux — It seems to make sense that a higher reflux ratio would create better separation, but more traffic in the tower requires energy. I have seen many towers operate at the same reflux rate no matter how much feed is running to the tower. Typically, a distillation tower can operate at many different reflux rates and produce acceptable products. The key is to find the most stable low energy rate you can. Modifying reflux rates isn’t a simple task as a tower running reduced reflux needs more operator attention. 5. Recycle — One of my favorite sayings is “get the right molecule in the right place on the first try.” The worst type of recycle is when you unintentionally create a large external loop. However, anytime you have to reprocess material or create internal recycle, you waste a lot of energy. Check your system to see if it’s possible to eliminate or reduce recycling. Besides offspec products, systems that use absorbing and systems that collect feed from several different sources are prone to unnecessary recycle. A quick check of your distillation column operation may save you a lot of energy. Be sure to periodically check the distillation column conditions to make sure you are operating efficiently. gary faagau, Energy Columnist GFaagau@putman.net A quick check of your distillation column operation may save you a lot of energy. 17 chemicalprocessing.com august 2008 http://chemicalprocessing.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Chemical Processing-August 2008 Chemical Processing- August 2008 Contents From the Editor ChemicalProcessing.com Field Notes In Process Energy Saver Compliance Advisor Protect your Plant What’s on Tap for Water? Keep Operations Safe Polystyrene Plant Gains Extra Output and More Process Puzzler Plant InSites Equipment & Services Adlits Product Spotlight/Classifieds Ad Index End Point Chemical Processing-August 2008 Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Chemical Processing- August 2008 (Page Cover1) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Chemical Processing- August 2008 (Page Cover2) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Chemical Processing- August 2008 (Page 3) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Chemical Processing- August 2008 (Page 4) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - From the Editor (Page 7) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - From the Editor (Page 8) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - ChemicalProcessing.com (Page 9) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - ChemicalProcessing.com (Page 10) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Field Notes (Page 11) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Field Notes (Page 12) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - In Process (Page 13) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - In Process (Page 14) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - In Process (Page 15) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - In Process (Page 16) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Energy Saver (Page 17) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Energy Saver (Page 18) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Compliance Advisor (Page 19) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Protect your Plant (Page 20) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Protect your Plant (Page 21) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Protect your Plant (Page 22) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Protect your Plant (Page 23) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Protect your Plant (Page 24) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Protect your Plant (Page 25) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Protect your Plant (Page 26) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - What’s on Tap for Water? (Page 27) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - What’s on Tap for Water? (Page 28) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - What’s on Tap for Water? (Page 29) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - What’s on Tap for Water? (Page 30) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - What’s on Tap for Water? (Page 31) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Keep Operations Safe (Page 32) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Keep Operations Safe (Page 33) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Keep Operations Safe (Page 34) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Keep Operations Safe (Page 35) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Keep Operations Safe (Page 36) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Keep Operations Safe (Page 37) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Keep Operations Safe (Page 38) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Polystyrene Plant Gains Extra Output and More (Page 39) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Polystyrene Plant Gains Extra Output and More (Page 40) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Process Puzzler (Page 41) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Process Puzzler (Page 42) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Plant InSites (Page 43) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Equipment & Services (Page 44) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Adlits (Page 45) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Product Spotlight/Classifieds (Page 46) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Product Spotlight/Classifieds (Page 47) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Product Spotlight/Classifieds (Page 48) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - Ad Index (Page 49) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - End Point (Page 50) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - End Point (Page Cover3) Chemical Processing-August 2008 - End Point (Page Cover4)
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