Jump to content



Featured Articles

Check out the latest featured articles.

File Library

Check out the latest downloads available in the File Library.

New Article

Product Viscosity vs. Shear

Featured File

Vertical Tank Selection

New Blog Entry

Low Flow in Pipes- posted in Ankur's blog

Simulation Of A Column With 2 Reboilers In Pro/ii


This topic has been archived. This means that you cannot reply to this topic.
3 replies to this topic
Share this topic:
| More

#1 kasiagaspar

kasiagaspar

    Brand New Member

  • Members
  • 7 posts

Posted 15 September 2007 - 02:50 AM

I need to simulate a column with two reboilers, but do not know what option is the best one. How to do it? I use PRO/II.

2 heat exchangers in the bottom seems to be not a good idea, i guess.

#2 Milutin

Milutin

    Veteran Member

  • Members
  • 47 posts

Posted 16 September 2007 - 01:34 AM

For mass and energy balance simulation there is no difference if you have one or two reboiler.
Two parallel reboilers on the column bottom is not uncommon solution in process industry.

Regards,

#3 abhi_agrawa

abhi_agrawa

    Gold Member

  • ChE Plus Subscriber
  • 216 posts

Posted 21 September 2007 - 10:03 PM

May I add, that distillation columns with a side reboiler are also not very uncommon. I have seen several Ethylene Fractionators (they separate Ethane and Ethylene), Propylene Fractionator (to separate Propane and Propylene) with a side reboiler. Sometimes, you may have a column with side condensers also (although, it does not seem to be a very good scheme).

In PRO-II you do not simulate this as two reboilers, rather you specify a duty on the stage where the reboiler is located, or you specify it as a pumparound.

You may also have two reboilers in the bottom of the column. This is usually the case when the duty of the reboiler is too high to have a single equipment. In such a case you can simulate it as one reboiler in PRO-II. There are also cases, when due to the application required, you may have a spare reboiler also. In such a case, the spare reboiler operates when there is a certain kind of process upset. The best example for such a system is heat integrated columns, where the condenser of one column acts as the reboiler for the other.

Hope this helps,
abhishek

#4 Madhavan

Madhavan

    Brand New Member

  • Members
  • 2 posts

Posted 30 September 2007 - 01:01 AM

QUOTE (kasiagaspar @ Sep 15 2007, 01:20 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
I need to simulate a column with two reboilers, but do not know what option is the best one. How to do it? I use PRO/II.

2 heat exchangers in the bottom seems to be not a good idea, i guess.

If you want to simulate with two reboilers and also use the heat exchanger module to rate/ design the reboiler, you may simulate with any of the following options:
1) as two heaters attached to the column at the bottom stage
2) simulate the reboilers as external units (column module without reboiler option) with draws and feed connected to the column. This is usually more cumbersome and more difficult to converge.
3) simulate it as a single reboiler and use pseudo-streams from column bottom splitting into two using splitter unit and feed it to the heat exchanger unit. Here you have to make sure that the return streams are same as those calculated in the internal column calculations.

If the split is not even (if the reboilers/piping is not identical, this is likely to be the case), the simulation is slightly more complicated as you have to decide the split based on the pressure balance.




Similar Topics