Chemical Processing - November 2007 - (Page 42) Filter assemblies unit Feed surge drum unit >> PLANT INSITES Carefully check vendor references determine the differences between a cited installation and yours When evaluating adding neW equipment, many engineers request reference contacts in other plants where such units already are installed. this is a valuable approach to verify that proposed equipment will really work as required. however, make sure you understand the potential process differences between your application and the one at the other site — or you may wind up unpleasantly surprised. Consider what happened at one refinery that was considering adding backwash filters to remove particulate from the feed to a hydrotreating reactor. if left in the feed, the particulate plugs the hydrotreater catalyst, reducing catalyst life. the backwash filter removes the particulate. When filter pressure drop becomes too high, the bank of filters goes into backwash mode. a local programmable logic controller (plC) takes one filter in the bank out-of-service and then >> Backwash liquid supply 5-in. diameter 4 ft. of level drop during backwash ~730-750 gpm LC FC <20 gpm to storage FC 730 gpm to FCC Filter backwash system 375 gpm for 90 seconds The engineer didn’t spot the difference in surge capacity. feeds a separate backwash fluid to remove the particulate accumulated within it. the filters require about-30-psi pressure differential between the backwash fluid inlet and outlet. the project engineer dutifully contacted the vendorsupplied references. in fact, he actually visited one of the plants. its experience with the filters was excellent. they ran well and achieved the desired catalyst life extension. the project engineer returned to his facility ready — eager, in fact — to get the filters installed. But, unfortunately, he didn’t realize that the plant he visited had downstream surge capacity to handle the flow spikes from backwashing. that plant had a large upstream surge volume as well. his plant lacked both. the proposed location for the backwash fluid supply was at the end of the hydrotreater process — at the hydrotreater stripper tower boot (Figure 1). Backwash liquid was to come downstream from the tower bottoms pump, go to backwash, then to the feed to the downstream fluid catalytic cracking unit (FCC). the FCC unit didn’t have any surge capacity. the flow was directly to the FCC reactor. a close look at Figure 1 reveals a host of problems. First, the level controller is on a very small fraction of the total 42 • november 2007 Figure 1. This setup suffers from four problems that can lead to major operating upsets. bottoms rate. this is a fundamental problem with the unit and worthy of its own discussion in the future. adding the backwash draw makes the level control problems worse. Second, the backwash flow required creates a sudden drop in tower bottoms level. third, the sudden spikes in backwash flow dramatically affect downstream FCC operation. Fourth, these sudden spikes in flow downstream create pressure balance problems in the piping. this configuration promises to be a continual source of major operating upsets. Solving this problem requires two sets of changes. the upstream inventory capacity must be increased; this is done by removing trays from the stripper tower, raising the level span, and adding a temporary reset on bottoms level control based on a backwash system signal. the downstream surge handling capacity also must be increased; this necessitates adding a surge drum for the FCC feed stream. effective handling of liquid surges is essential for making the entire backwash system work. Once the importance of this and the need to add surge capacity became clear, the scope of changes dramatically increased. this episode underscores two key points: Few installations match exactly; so it’s critical to determine the differences. it’s also crucial to understand the dynamic behavior of a process as well as its steady-state operation. CP Andrew Sloley, contributing editor ASloley@Putman.net www.chemicalprocessing.com http://www.chemicalprocessing.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Chemical Processing - November 2007 Chemical Processing - November 2007 Contents From the Editor ChemicalProcessing.com Field Notes In Process Energy Saver Compliance Advisor PAT isn't Standing Pat Pursue the Perfect Plant Eliminate Exchanger Tubing Troubles Portable Conveyor Speeds Paint Production Process Puzzler Plant InSites Equipment & Services Product Spotlight/Classifieds Ad Index End Point Chemical Processing - November 2007 Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Chemical Processing - November 2007 (Page Cover1) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Chemical Processing - November 2007 (Page Cover2) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Chemical Processing - November 2007 (Page 3) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Chemical Processing - November 2007 (Page 4) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Contents (Page 5) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Contents (Page 6) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - From the Editor (Page 7) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - From the Editor (Page 8) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - ChemicalProcessing.com (Page 9) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - ChemicalProcessing.com (Page 10) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Field Notes (Page 11) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Field Notes (Page 12) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - In Process (Page 13) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - In Process (Page 14) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - In Process (Page 15) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - In Process (Page 16) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Energy Saver (Page 17) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Energy Saver (Page 18) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Compliance Advisor (Page 19) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - PAT isn't Standing Pat (Page 20) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - PAT isn't Standing Pat (Page 21) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - PAT isn't Standing Pat (Page 22) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - PAT isn't Standing Pat (Page 23) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - PAT isn't Standing Pat (Page 24) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - PAT isn't Standing Pat (Page 25) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - PAT isn't Standing Pat (Page 26) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Pursue the Perfect Plant (Page 27) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Pursue the Perfect Plant (Page 28) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Pursue the Perfect Plant (Page 29) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Pursue the Perfect Plant (Page 30) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Pursue the Perfect Plant (Page 31) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Pursue the Perfect Plant (Page 32) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Eliminate Exchanger Tubing Troubles (Page 33) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Eliminate Exchanger Tubing Troubles (Page 34) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Eliminate Exchanger Tubing Troubles (Page 35) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Eliminate Exchanger Tubing Troubles (Page 36) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Eliminate Exchanger Tubing Troubles (Page 37) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Portable Conveyor Speeds Paint Production (Page 38) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Portable Conveyor Speeds Paint Production (Page 39) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Process Puzzler (Page 40) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Process Puzzler (Page 41) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Plant InSites (Page 42) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Equipment & Services (Page 43) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Equipment & Services (Page 44) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Product Spotlight/Classifieds (Page 45) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Product Spotlight/Classifieds (Page 46) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Product Spotlight/Classifieds (Page 47) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Product Spotlight/Classifieds (Page 48) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - Ad Index (Page 49) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - End Point (Page 50) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - End Point (Page Cover3) Chemical Processing - November 2007 - End Point (Page Cover4)
For optimal viewing of this digital publication, please enable JavaScript and then refresh the page. If you would like to try to load the digital publication without using Flash Player detection, please click here.