Dme B
Dme B
Dme B
Design Project
Process Description
Figure 1 is a preliminary process flow diagram (PFD) for the dimethyl ether production
process. The raw material is methanol, which may be assumed to be pure. The feed plus recycle
is pumped in P-201; heated, vaporized, and superheated in a heat exchanger (E-201); and then
sent to the reactor (R-201) in which dimethyl ether (DME) is formed. The reaction that occurs is
shown below. The reactor effluent is cooled and partially condensed in a heat exchanger (E-
202), and it is then sent to the separation section. In T-201, “pure” DME is produced in the top
stream (distillate), with methanol and water in the bottom stream (bottoms). In T-202, the
distillate contains methanol for recycle, and the bottoms contains waste water. The desired
dimethyl ether production rate is 100,000 tonne/y.
Process Details
Feed Stream
Stream 1: methanol, from storage tank at 1 atm and 25°C, may be assumed pure
Effluent Streams
Stream 7: dimethyl ether product, required 100,000 tonne/y, may be assumed pure
Stream 10: waste water stream, may be assumed pure in material balance calculations, is
not pure, so there is a cost for its treatment
Equipment
Pump (P-201)
The pump increases the pressure of the feed plus recycle to a minimum of 15 bar.
This unit heats, vaporizes, and superheats the feed to 250°C at 15 bar. The source of
energy for heating must be above 250°C.
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3 4
1 2
5
6
10
2
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Reactor (R-201):
The reaction is equilibrium limited. The conversion is 80% of the equilibrium conversion
at the pressure and exit temperature of the reactor. Based on the catalyst and reaction
kinetics, the reactor must operate at a minimum of 15 bar. The reactor operates
adiabatically, and, since the reaction is exothermic, the reactor effluent temperature will
be above 250°C. If you choose, you may run the reactor isothermally, in which case you
need a medium to remove the heat generated, and that medium must always be at a lower
temperature than that of the reactor.
2708.6317
ln K = −2.205 + (2)
T
This unit cools and partially condenses the reactor effluent. The valve before this heat
exchanger reduces the pressure. This exit pressure may be at any pressure below the
reactor pressure, but must be identical to the pressure at which T-201 operates.
This distillation column separates DME from methanol and water. For this semester
only, the separation may be assumed to be perfect, i.e., pure DME is produced in the
distillate. The temperature of the distillate is the temperature at which DME condenses at
the chosen column pressure. For this project only, you may use the Antoine’s Equation
constants for DME given in Felder and Rousseau1 up to 50°C.
In this heat exchanger, the contents of the top of T-201 (pure dimethyl ether) are
condensed from saturated vapor to saturated liquid at the column pressure at a rate three
times the flow of Stream 7. One-third of the condensate becomes Stream 7 and the
remainder is returned to the column. The cost is for the amount of cooling medium
needed to remove the necessary energy. The cooling medium must always be at a lower
temperature than the stream being condensed.
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In this heat exchanger, you may assume that one-half of the flow of Stream 8 is vaporized
from saturated liquid to saturated vapor at the column pressure and is returned to the
column. The temperature of the stream being vaporized is the bubble point temperature
of the methanol-water mixture at the column pressure. The cost is for the amount of
steam needed to supply the necessary heat. The steam temperature must be above the
temperature of the vaporizing stream.
This distillation column separates methanol for recycle from water. For this semester
only, the separation may be assumed to be perfect. However, since we know this cannot
be true in practice, the water stream is actually a waste water stream, and there is a cost
for its treatment. The temperature of the distillate is the temperature at which methanol
condenses at the chosen column pressure. The valve before T-202 is optional. It is
needed if the pressure of T-202 is chosen to be lower than that of T-201. If the pressures
are the same, the valve can be eliminated. If you desire a higher pressure in T-202, you
must add a pump in place of the valve.
In this heat exchanger, the contents of the top of T-202 (pure methanol) are condensed
from saturated vapor to saturated liquid at the column pressure at a rate three times the
flow of Stream 9. One-third of the condensate becomes Stream 9 and the remainder is
returned to the column. The cost is for the amount of cooling medium needed to remove
the necessary energy. The cooling medium must always be at a lower temperature than
the stream being condensed.
In this heat exchanger, you may assume that one-half of the flow of Stream 10 is
vaporized from saturated liquid to saturated vapor at the column pressure and is returned
to the column. The temperature of the stream being vaporized is the boiling point of
water at the column pressure. The cost is for the amount of steam needed to supply the
necessary heat. The steam temperature must be above the temperature of the vaporizing
stream.
Other Equipment:
For two or more streams to mix, they must be at identical pressures. Pressure reduction
may be accomplished by adding a valve. All of these valves are not necessarily shown on
the attached flowsheet, and it may be assumed that additional valves can be added as
needed at no cost. Flow occurs from higher pressure to lower pressure. Pumps increase
the pressure of liquid streams, and compressors increase the pressure of gas streams.
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Utility Costs
Electricity $0.05/kW h
Data
Use data from in Felder and Rousseau1 or from any handbook2. The following data are not
readily available in these references.
Heat of Formation
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Economic Analysis
When evaluating alternative cases, the following objective function should be used. It is the
equivalent annual operating cost (EAOC), and is defined as
EAOC = -(product value - feed cost – utility costs – waste treatment cost - capital cost annuity)
A negative EAOC means there is a profit. It is desirable to minimize the EAOC; i.e., a large
negative EAOC is very desirable.
The cost for dimethyl ether is $0.43/lb. The cost for methanol is $0.60/gal.
Other operating costs are utilities, such as steam, cooling water, natural gas, and electricity.
The capital cost annuity is an annual cost (like a car payment) associated with the one-time,
fixed cost of plant construction. A list of capital costs for all pieces of equipment will be
provided in early March.
i (1 + i ) n
capital cost annuity = FCI
(1 + i ) n − 1
where FCI is the installed cost of all equipment; i is the interest rate, i = 0.15; and n is the plant
life for accounting purposes, n = 10.
Optimization
We will learn optimization methods in ChE 38. The objective function (EAOC) is defined
above. It is your responsibility to define appropriate decision variables. If there are too many
decision variables to do a reasonable optimization, it is your responsibility to determine, with
appropriate justification, which ones most significantly affect the objective function and focus on
only those decision variables.
Other Information
You should assume that a year equals 8000 hours. This is about 330 days, which allows for
periodic shut-down and maintenance.
Deliverables
Each group must deliver a report written using a word processor. The report should be clear
and concise. The format is explained in a separate document (Written Design Reports). Any
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report not containing a labeled PFD and a stream table will be considered unacceptable. The
stream table must include temperature, pressure, phase, total mass flowrate, total molar flowrate,
and component molar flowrates. When presenting results for different cases, graphs are
generally superior to tables. The report appendix should contain details of calculations for the
optimal case. These calculations may be (neatly) hand-written. Calculations that can not be
followed easily will lose credit. Refer to the document entitled Written Design Reports for more
information.
Each group will give an oral report in which the results of this project are presented in a
concise manner. The oral report should be no more than 15 minutes, and each group member
must speak. A 5-10 minute question-and-answer session will follow. Instructions for
presentation of oral reports will be provided in a separate document entitled Oral Reports.
However, the best way to learn how to present an oral report, other than actually presenting one,
is to make time to see some of the oral reports presented by the juniors the week before you are
to present your report. The presentations will most likely be on Wednesday, April 18, 2001,
between 11:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. You will be kept informed of the scheduling of these
presentations.
As mentioned in the cover memo, the written project report is due on Monday, April 23,
2001, at 1:00 p.m. The oral reports will be Monday, April 23, 2001 (ChE 38 class) and
Wednesday, April 25, 2001 (ChE 41 class). There will be a project review on Friday, April 27,
2001 (ChE 41 class). In addition, everyone must attend the senior design presentation at 2:30 pm
on Thursday, April 26, 2001. Furthermore, attendance is required of all students during their
classmates’ presentations (this means in the room, not in the hall or the computer room). Failure
to attend any of the above-required sessions will result in a decrease in one letter grade (per
occurrence) from your project grade in both ChE 38 and ChE 41.
Anyone not participating in this project will automatically receive an F for ChE 38 and ChE
41, regardless of other grades earned in this classes.
Revisions
As with any open-ended problem; i.e., a problem with no single correct answer, the problem
statement above is deliberately vague. The possibility exists that as you work on this problem,
your questions will require revisions and/or clarifications of the problem statement. You should
be aware that these revisions/clarifications may be forthcoming.
References
2. Perry, R. H. and D. Green, eds., Perry’s Chemical Engineering Handbook (7th ed.), McGraw-
Hill, New York, 1997.
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The equipment costs for the dimethyl ether plant are given below. Each cost is for an
individual piece of equipment, including installation.