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Modeling of Reactive Distillation

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Presentation on theme: "Modeling of Reactive Distillation"— Presentation transcript:

1 Modeling of Reactive Distillation
John Schell Dr. R. Bruce Eldridge Dr. Thomas F. Edgar

2 Outline Outline Overview of Reactive Distillation Project Overview
Tower Design Steady-State Models Dynamic Models and Control Individual Work Column Design and Operation Validation of Models Preliminary Dynamics and Control Studies Future Work

3 Reactive Distillation
Homogeneous or Heterogeneous/ Catalytic Distillation First Patents in 1920s Applied in 1980s to Methyl Acetate Common applications: Ethylene Glycol MTBE, TAME, TAA

4 Favorable Applications Westerterp (1992)
Match between reaction and distillation temperatures Difference in relative volatility between product and one reactant Fast reaction not requiring a large amount of catalyst Others: liquid phase reaction, azeotrope considerations,exothermic reactions

5 Subawalla Approach (Dissertation)
1. Decide on a Pre-reactor - Rate of reaction - >1/2 of initial reaction rate at 80% of equilibrium conversion 2. Pressure 3. Location of Zone 4. Estimate Catalyst - Isothermal Plug-flow reactor with ideal separators 5. Design Tower - Size reaction zone • Catalyst requirements • Column diameter - Determine reactant feed ratio - Feed location - Reflux ratio • High reflux rate times non-rxtive column - Diameter • Through-put • Catalyst density

6 Project Overview Design and Construct TAME Column
Validate Steady State Models Develop Dynamic Models Test Control Algorithms

7 TAME Chemistry TAME Chemistry Exothermic Equilibrium Limited
45-62% at C Azeotropes Catalyst: Amberlyst-15 Methanol can inhibit rates. Rihko and Krause (1995)

8 Pilot Plant (SRP) Pilot Plant (SRP) 0.152-meter diameter column
Finite reflux 7 meters of packing in 3 sections Fisher DeltaV Control Koch’s Katamax packing Makeup MeOH C5 from Cat Cracker Pre-Reactor Reactive Distillation Column Mixing Tank Back - Cracking Reactor Recycle TAME Unreacted C5, MeOH 3.7 atm

9 SRP Pilot Plant SRP Pilot Plant
Koch – Spool section, Katamax, Catalyst SRP - $145K

10 Steady-State Multiplicity
Bravo et al. (1993) Observed multiple steady-states in TAME CD Hauan et al. (1997) dynamic simulation provided evidence in MTBE system Nijuis et al. (1993) found multiplicity in MTBE system Jacobs and Krishna (1993)

11 Steady-State Distillation Models
Trayed Tower: Equilibrium Model Rate Model Packed Tower: Continuous Model

12 TAME Reaction Rates TAME Reaction Rates

13 TAME Concentration Profile

14 Effective Reaction Rate
Traditionally simulations use intrinsic reaction rate. Effective rate is a function of intrinsic rate and diffusion limitations. Molefraction Effective Rate

15 Control for TAME Tower Control for TAME Tower Fisher DeltaV
Visual Basic Matlab, Visual Studio State Estimation Temperature Profiles Online Analyzers Control Algorithms PID Linear MPC Non-Linear MPC

16 Individual Work Design and Construct RD Column for Novel System
Steady State Model Validation Dynamic Models and Control Study

17 Novel System A + B C1 C3 C2 Kinetic Reaction Exothermic
Not Equilibrium limited Equilibrium Isomers Exothermic Kinetics from CSTR Experiments Feed is dominated by inerts Replace hazardous heterogeneous catalyst

18 Novel System Data Novel System Data

19 Novel System Data Novel System Data

20 Simulation Validation - 50 psig

21 Simulation Validation – 35 psi

22 Effect of Pressure

23 Effect of Varying Feed Rate

24 Dynamic Modeling and Control Study
Aspen Custom Modeler/ Aspen Dynamics Validate Steady State Solution Validate Dynamic Studies Develop Control Algorithms PID Linear MPC NLMPC

25 Equations vs. Variables
Aspen Custom Modeler Aspen Custom Modeler Formerly Speed-Up and DynaPlus Equation Solver Aspen Properties Plus Tear Variables automatically selected Solves Steady-State and Dynamic Dynamic Events and Task Automation Equations vs. Variables

26 Validation of Dynamic Simulator

27 Feed Disturbance With Manual Control

28 Control of Reactive Distillation
Configurations DB LV BV, LB… Goals Conversion Product Purity F R D B V L Duty

29 Control of Reactive Distillation
Bartlett and Wahnschafft (1997) Simple Feed-Forward/ Feed-Back PI Scheme Sneesby et al. (1999) Two point control with linear conversion estimator Kumar and Daoutidis (1999) Showed linear controllers unstable for ethylene glycol systems Demonstrated possible Nonlinear MPC scheme

30 Dependency of Conversion on Reboiler Duty and Reflux Ratio

31 Conversion vs Reboiler Duty

32 Single Tray Conversion Estimation

33 Single Tray Purity Estimation

34 Feed Disturbance With Manual Control

35 Feed Disturbance with Simple PID Control

36 Conclusion and Future Work
TAME Tower Collect Data Validate Models Developing Advanced Models Improvements New chemical system Adjust for better dynamic studies Novel System Validate Dynamic Models Develop Control Algorithms


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