Heat Power Integration
Heat Power Integration
Heat Power Integration
CBB4313:
Universiti
Heat Integration
Teknologi PETRONAS
(May 2014and
Semester)
Turkmenistan
International Oil and Gas University
Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, 67 June 2014
CHAPTER 1
Heat and Power Integration
26 May 2014
Cheng Seong Khor
khorchengseong@petronas.com.my
Chemical Engineering Department, Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS
Cheng Seong Khor
About me
Lesson outcomes
By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:
1. calculate heat exchanged between streams
2. calculate amount of utilities required
3. determine net heat requirement of a heat exchanger network and evaluate the
advantages & disadvantages
1.2. Example 1
Q = FCp(T2 T1)
FCp: amount of heat to change the temperature of the associated stream by one
degree
1.2. Example 1
Stream
C1
C2
H1
FCp
Heat Out, (BTU/s)
Unit Cost
Tin (F) Tout (F) (BTU/sF)
Q = FCp(T2 T1)
($/lb)
100
580
1
480 (requires heating) 0
100
580
2
960 (requires heating) 0
600
200
3
+1200 (requires
0
cooling/provides heat)
Net = 240
Utilities:
Steam, S
650
Hot water, HW
250
Cooling water, CW 80
650
>130
<125
High
Low
Moderate
Cheng Seong Khor
Solution 1:
Heat C1 only to 260F, so there will be adequate temperature driving force of 20F
Solution 2:
Coincidentally, H1 reaches 226.7C after exchanges, and need same amount of utility
Solution 3: Split H1
Put 320 BTU/s of heat using steam and removed 3(26.7) = 80 BTU/s to CW
The difference is again the net of 240 BTU/s
Put in extra 80 BTU/s using steam and removed the same amount using cold utilit
Paid twice for these extra BTU/sput in and then took out
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11
Cold
Hot
Temperature Temperature
(590)
600
580
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
C1 C2
1
2
(190)
(590)
200
Remarks
(3)(600 590) = 30
(1 + 2 3)(580 190) = 0
|
(1 + 2)(190 100) = 270
100
(110)
H1 Stream
3
FCp (BTU/F) for stream
12
|
|
|
|
(190)
(590)
200
(3)(600 590) = 30
(1 + 2 3)(580 190) = 0
(1 + 2)(190 100) = 270
100
(110)
C1 C2
H1 Stream
1
2
3
FCp (BTU/F) for stream
Columns Cold Temperature and Hot Temperature indicate the temperature partitioning
to decompose the problem
Hottest temperature = 600F = inlet temperature for H1
Cannot heat any cold stream hotter than 590F using H1
600F for a hot stream is equivalent to 590F for a cold streamshow this equivalence by listing
590F for cold streams adjacent to 600F for hot streams
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|
|
|
|
C1 C2
1
2
(190)
(590)
200
100
(110)
H1 Stream
3
FCp (BTU/F) for stream
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Top interval rejects 30 BTU/s of heathot enough to supply part of the 270 BTU/s of heat
needed by bottom interval
Net of 240 BTU/s of heat needed by bottom interval
Cold end of problemcold enough to supply using hot water (not steam)
Important points:
Need only heating for this problem
Can supply heat at temperatures that allow it to be provided by hot watercan have almost for
free
Cheng Seong Khor
15
Then only need to consider the net heat excess or deficit outside of temperature intervals
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