2021 AIChE Virtual Spring Meeting and 17th Global Congress on Process Safety
(21f) Good Distributor Design for High-Velocity Feed Debottlenecks a Crude Preflash Tower
From the lowest downcomer, 4" pipe drains the liquid into the top baffle tray. At two recent outages, the 4" pipe was found broken and falling down, with a hole in the seal pan from which it originated. As the pipe was located right in front of a high-velocity feed entry, it was likely that feed impingement at high velocities generated vibration and caused the 4â pipe to collapse. It was believed that due to the pipe breakage, the high feed vapor velocities picked up the descending liquid or rose up the bottom downcomer, causing the naphtha product to become dark. The initial solution sought was reorientation of the 4â pipe away from the feed.
Suspecting that there may be other issues, Bazan requested Fluor to assist with the problem analysis. KochGlitsch were later added to the team to consult on hardware changes. Our analysis determined that the breakage of 4â pipe was insufficient to explain the entrainment and dark naphtha. We determined that the root cause was excessive feed velocities, with feed entry too close to the bottom tray.
To solve the problem, it was necessary to break the incoming momentum and to divert the feed to a lower point in the tower. This was achieved by a unique feed entry design for the very high-velocity feed, by removing one of the baffle trays to permit feed entry at a lower point, and by adding a specially-designed impingement baffle to break the incoming momentum.
When the tower returned to service, the dark naphtha episodes completely disappeared. The unit throughput could be raised by more than 30% without any adverse effects on operation. The entrainment problem has been eliminated.
Our paper details the problem, analysis, and solution.