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Plant-wide Control for Economic Operation of a Recycle Process

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Presentation on theme: "Plant-wide Control for Economic Operation of a Recycle Process"— Presentation transcript:

1 Plant-wide Control for Economic Operation of a Recycle Process
Rahul Jagtap, Nitin Kaistha, Sigurd Skogestad* Chemical Engineering IIT Kanpur (India),*NTNU Norway

2 Objective To evaluate impact of plant wide control systems on the Economic Operation of a Recycle process.

3 Recycle Process Recycle A + B Fresh A Fresh B C O L U M N Byproduct D
Product C REACTOR A + B C B + C  D Cooling Water C O L U M N

4 Base Case Process Design
FA Processing Rate: 100 kmol/h Desired C Product Purity: >99 mol% # of trays in columns: 2.5*NminFenske (for 1% key recoveries) Base case design VRxr m3 Trxr OC A:B in rxr feed (xCD)col

5 8 Steady State Operating Degrees of Freedom Process Operation Modes
Steady State Economic Optimization Optimize Operating conditions for max operating profit (m$/yr) Objective Function = Product cost – (Reactant cost + Utility cost) 8 Steady State Operating Degrees of Freedom Process Operation Modes Mode I: Fixed Feed Processing Rate (FA fixed) Mode II: Maximum Throughput

6 Constrained Optimization Results
Mode I 6.0 m3 70.47 oC 2.327 100 kmol/hr 0.12 3.304 m$/yr Mode II 6.0 m3 100 oC 1.67 184.6 kmol/hr 0.24 5.155 m$/yr Reactor Volume Reactor Temperature Excess Ratio Fresh A (xCD)1 Operating Profit Active Constraints Column 1 Boilup Column 1 Boilup Reactor Volume Reactor Volume FA fixed Reactor Temperature

7 Degrees of Freedom 2 Unconstrained DOFs Operation DOF = 8
Recycle A + B Fresh A Fresh B C O L U M N Byproduct D Product C REACTOR A + B C B + C  D Cooling Water C O L U M N Operation DOF = 8 Need 8 associated CVs 2 Unconstrained DOFs

8 Managing Unconstrained DOFs
Reflux Rate L in Column I Mode I Mode II OptimumBase Case 3.304 5.155 StripperBase Case 5.154 Optimumw/ disturbance 3.279 5.003 Stripperw/ disturbance 5.007 Operating Column 1 as a Stripper is Self Optimizing (xA)rxr in (Mode II) Trxr (Mode I) Mode I OptimumBaseCase 3.304 Optimumw/ disturbance 3.279 Const Rxr Tw/ disturbance Mode I OptimumBaseCase 5.155 Optimumw/ disturbance 5.007 Const (xA)w/ disturbance 5.000 Trxr is self optimizing (xA)rxr in is self optimizing

9 Control Structure 1 Optimal Mode I A + B → C B + C → D FC set CC TC X
LC set PC LC FC TC XC LC CC PC FC set OC TPM A C B A + B → C B + C → D Max Boilup TPM FC D

10 Control Structure 1 Optimal Mode II A + B → C B + C → D PC PC X CC set
FC set CC TC X LC PC LC FC TC XC LC CC PC FC A C B Max A + B → C B + C → D set Max Boilup FC D

11 Conventional Temperature Control on Column 1
Control Structure 2 Conventional Temperature Control on Column 1 Mode I FC set CC TC X LC set TC PC LC FC XC LC CC PC FC set OC TPM A C B Max boil up TPM FC OC A + B → C B + C → D D

12 Conventional Temperature Control on Column 1
Control Structure 2 Conventional Temperature Control on Column 1 Mode II FC set CC TC X LC set TC PC LC FC XC LC CC PC FC A C B Max boil up TPM FC OC Max A + B → C B + C → D D

13 Fix Total Flow to Reactor (Luyben)
Control Structure 3 Fix Total Flow to Reactor (Luyben) Mode I set OC Max boil up set TC PC LC FC XC FC set CC TC X LC LC CC PC FC set OC TPM A TPM FC C B A + B → C B + C → D D

14 Fix Total Flow to Reactor (Luyben)
Control Structure 3 Fix Total Flow to Reactor (Luyben) Mode II set OC Max boil up set TC PC LC FC XC FC set CC TC X LC LC CC PC FC A TPM FC C B Max A + B → C B + C → D D

15 Traditional: Fixed Fresh Feed
Control Structure 4 Traditional: Fixed Fresh Feed Mode I set OC Max boil up from Boilup(for Mode I) FC set CC TC X LC set TC PC LC FC XC LC CC PC FC set OC B FC TPM C A A + B → C B + C → D D

16 Traditional: Fixed Fresh Feed
Control Structure 4 Traditional: Fixed Fresh Feed Mode II set OC Max boil up FC set CC TC X LC set TC PC LC FC XC LC CC PC FC B FC TPM C A Max A + B → C B + C → D D

17 Quantification of Back-off
Worst Case Disturbance : 5% step increase of heavy impurity in the Fresh B feed stream For Mode I: VrxrSP, TPMSP(OCSP) adjusted such that Vrxr and Boilup1Col1 do not violate the constraints during transients For Mode II: VrxrSP, Trxr , TPMSP(OCSP) adjusted such that Vrxr ,Trxr and Boilup1Col1 do not violate the constraints during transients

18 Reducing Boilup Back-off
Apply advanced MPC algorithm in boil up Optimizing Controller DMC applied here Apply dynamic lead lag element

19 Boilup Back-off Illustration: Mode II
Regulatory control Supervisory PI control Dynamic Matrix Control Lead-Lag Control

20 Quantitative Back-off Results: Mode I
FA kmol /hr (xA/xB)rxr feed a b c d Col 1 Boilup kmol/hr a b c d Profit x106 $/year a b c d Base 2.327 321.1 3.304 CS1 100 2.318 3.303 CS2 2.234 2.259 2.245 2.279 311.2 314.6 312.9 316.9 3.299 3.300 3.301 CS3 2.16 2.213 2.185 2.243 302.2 308.6 305.3 312.2 3.294 3.298 3.296 CS4 2.13 2.177 2.191 2.202 299 304.5 306.2 307.5 3.290 3.295 3.297 a:Regulatory control b:with PI optimizing control c:with DMC control d:with Lead-Lag control

21 Role of Regulatory CS and OC: Mode I
Slight decrease in profit CS1 < CS2 < CS3 < CS4 Reason: Decreased yield due to lower recycle (lower [xA/xB]rxr in) Lower boil up back-off with DMC OC and OC w/ dynamic lead-lag

22 Quantitative Back-off Results: Mode II
FA kmol/hr a b c d Col 1 Boilup Profit x106 $/year Base 184.6 321.1 5.155 CS1 179.11 5.003 CS2 173.96 176.22 176.5 177.06 309.4 314.8 315.4 316.7 4.853 4.921 4.930 4.949 CS3 170.27 173.74 175.2 176.08 299.2 307.2 310.4 312.3 4.726 4.827 4.871 4.896 CS4 167.8 173 173.46 175.5 294.2 306 307 311.6 4.660 4.814 4.826 4.882 a:Regulatory control b:with PI optimizing control c:with DMC control d:with Lead-Lag control

23 Role of Regulatory CS and OC: Mode II
Due to back off in VRxrSP and TRxrSP Noticeable decrease in profit CS1 < CS2 < CS3 < CS4 Reason: Lower production due to higher boil-up back-off Lower boil-up back-off with DMC OC and OC w/ dynamic lead-lag

24 Interpretation of Trend
Loss in Profit CS1 < CS2 < CS3 < CS4 As active constraint control MV location moves away from constraint location, back off due to transients increases KEY HEURISTIC Tight active constraint control essential for optimal operation Locate active constraint control MV as close as possible (or at) the primary bottleneck constraint Where regulatory CS is already implemented, supervisory optimizing control mitigates back-off

25 Conclusions Tight active constraint control key to economic process operation Active constraint control MV should be located at (or close to) the constraint variable location Application of advanced control algorithms mitigates back-off and hence the loss in profit Thank You ?

26 Thank you

27 Reaction kinetics and data
Main reaction A + B C r1 = k1 XA XB kmol/m3.s ; k1 = 2x10e8*exp(-60000/RT) Side reaction B + C D r2 = k1 XB XC kmol/m3.s ; k1 = 2x10e9*exp(-80000/RT) Relative volatilities αA > αB > αC > αD Hypotheticals MW NBP (C) A B C D VLE Model Soave-Redlich-Kwong

28 Derating in boil up is increasing in order CS1< CS2 < CS3 < CS4
For a given control structure Lead Lag constraint controller requires minimum back-off from bottleneck constraint Since the throughput is fixed , decrease in profit is very less (of the order of thousands)

29 Derating in boil up is increasing in order CS1< CS2 < CS3 < CS4
For a given control structure Lead Lag constraint controller requires minimum back-off from bottleneck constraint Decrease in profit due to selection of control structure is of the order of hundreds of thousands(which is considerable) Decrease in profit due to selection of contraint controller is of the order of hundreds of thousands(which is considerable)


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