2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(205a) Process Design and Intensification of Dividing Wall Column for an Industrial Methyl Methacrylate Separation Process
Authors
In this work, we revisit this industrial methyl methacrylate separation process based on our recently proposed framework for design, synthesis, and operational analysis of process intensification systems [6]. Specifically, a phenomena-based synthesis representation is developed using the Generalized Modular Representation Framework (GMF) to capture DWC systems with fundamental chemical building blocks (i.e., mass/heat exchange module and pure heat exchange module) [7-9]. To describe the non-ideal vapor-liquid-liquid behavior, rigorous thermodynamic models (e.g. UNQUAC) is explicitly incorporated in the synthesis model. The base case DWC design presented in [4] is then simulated with a pre-fixed building block structure to validate the accuracy and efficiency of GMF for this specific case study. Thereafter, a superstructure optimization model is formulated to systematically generate the optimal and intensified process alternative(s) for improved cost performance without any pre-postulation of plausible process unit or flowsheets. The resulting phenomenological process alternatives are translated to unit operation-based flowsheet for rigorous design and simulation using Aspen Plus. Given the inherent highly nonlinear dynamics with multiple steady-states in DWC systems, explicit/multi-parametric model predictive controllers designed via the PAROC framework [9] are applied to the above derived DWC-based flowsheets to ensure feasible operation under disturbance and uncertainty. Two alternative case studies are also presented for comparison of design strategies as well as optimality of the process solutions: (i) unit operation-based optimization of the base case design, and (ii) unit operation-based optimization of the conventional two-column flowsheet design with heat integration.
References
- Yildirim, Ö., Kiss, A. A., & Kenig, E. Y. (2011). Dividing wall columns in chemical process industry: a review on current activities. Separation and Purification Technology, 80(3), 403-417.
- Tian, Y., Demirel, S. E., Hasan, M. M. F., & Pistikopoulos, E. N (2018). An overview of process systems engineering approaches for process intensification: State of the art. Chemical Engineering and Processing: Process Intensification, 133, 160-210.
- Triantafyllou, C., & Smith, R. (1993). The design and optimization of dividing wall distillation columns. In Energy Efficiency in Process Technology(pp. 351-360). Springer, Dordrecht.
- Jewell, D. W., Pendergast, J. G., & Worley, W. G. (2019). U.S. Patent No. 10,392,337. Washington, DC: U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
- Chang, W. L., & Chien, I. L. (2016). Energy-saving design and control of a methyl methacrylate separation process. Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, 55(11), 3064-3074.
- Tian, Y., Pappas, I., Burnak, B., Katz, J., & Pistikopoulos, E. N. (2020). A systematic framework for the synthesis of operable process intensification systems â Reactive separation systems. Computers & Chemical Engineering, 134, 106675.
- Papalexandri, K. P., & Pistikopoulos, E. N. (1996). Generalized modular representation framework for process synthesis. AIChE Journal, 42(4), 1010-1032.
- Proios, P., & Pistikopoulos, E. N. (2006). Hybrid generalized modular/collocation framework for distillation column synthesis. AIChE journal, 52(3), 1038-1056.
- Tian, Y., & Pistikopoulos, E. N. (2019). Generalized modular representation framework for the synthesis of extractive separation systems. In Computer Aided Chemical Engineering(Vol. 47, pp. 475-480). Elsevier.
- Pistikopoulos, E. N., Diangelakis, N. A., Oberdieck, R., Papathanasiou, M. M., Nascu, I., & Sun, M. (2015). PAROC â An integrated framework and software platform for the optimisation and advanced model-based control of process systems. Chemical Engineering Science, 136, 115-138.