Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
SOME RESULTS IN GRAPH THEORY
1 ) A graph is any connection of points, some pairs of which are connected by lines. 2 ) If a graph has p points and q lines, it is called a (p,q) graph. points process and utility streams lines heat exchangers 3 ) A path is a sequence of distinct lines, each are starting where the previous are ends, e.g. AECGD in Fig. A. A B C D Figure A Figure B E F G H A B C D E F G H
2
SOME RESULTS IN GRAPH THEORY
4 ) A graph is connected if any two points can be joined by a path, e. g. Fig. A 5 ) Points which are connected to some fired point by paths are said to form a component, e. g. Fig A has one component. Fig B has two components. 6 ) A cycle is a path which begins and ends at the same point, e. g. CGDHC in Fig. A. 7 ) The maximum number of independent cycles is called the cycle rank of the graph. 8 ) The cycle rank of a (p,q) graph with k components is q - p + k
3
An Implication of Cycle Rank
U = N+L-S where, N = the total number of process and utility streams L = the number of independent loops S = the number of separate components in a network U = the number of heat exchanger services
4
Examples of U = N+L-S U = N-1 = 5 U = N-2 = 4 U = N+1-1 = N = 6
ST H1 H2 U = N-1 = 5 U = N-2 = 4 U = N+1-1 = N = 6 C1 C2 CW ST H1 H2 C1 C2 CW ST H1 H2 X X 30-X X C1 C2 CW
5
CAPITAL TARGET Umin = N - 1 where,
Umin = the minimum number of services N = the total number of process and utility streams Note, U = N + L – S L = 0 S = 1
6
§ PINCH DESIGN METHOD RULE 1: THE “TICK-OFF” HEURISTIC UMIN = N-1 - THE EQUATION IS SATISFIED IF EVERY MATCH BRINGS ONE STREAM TO ITS TARGET TEMPERATURE OR EXHAUSTS A UTILITY. - FEASIBILITY CONSTRAINTS : ENERGY BALANCE TMIN
7
Example 1 Stream No TS TF CP Heat Load and Type (F) (F) BTU/hr F Q BTU/hr (1) Cold (2) Cold (3) Hot (4) Cold (5) Hot (6) Cold (7) Hot Tmin = 20F Qhmin = 104 BTU/hr Qcmin = 0
8
Hot streams CP Q 1.32 2.624 590 471 419 533 400 430 400 280 3 ○ 5 ○ 505.6 7 1 416 ○ 2 505.6 4 ○○ 341.1 6 341.1 Cold streams
9
CP Q 1.557 4.128 590 574 471 400 430 400 ○ 3 ○ 86.3 5 254 ○ 1 86.3 2 412.8 ○ 4 412.8
10
CP Q 590 400 430 ○ ○ 3 ○ 1 H ○ 2 22.4
11
CP Q 1.32 2.624 590 471 533 400 430 400 280 ○ ○ ○ 3 ○ ○ 5 ○ 505.6 7 ○ ○ H 1 86.3 ○ ○ 2 22.4 505.6 ○ 4 412.8 341.1 ○ 6 341.1
12
§ PINCH DESIGN METHOD RULE 2: DECOMPOSITION THE HEN PROBLEM IS DIVIDED AT THE PINCH INTO SEPARATE DESIGN TASKS. THE DESIGN IS STARTED AT THE PINCH AND DEVELOPED MOVING AWAY FROM THE PINCH.
13
EXAMPLE 2 Temperature Heat Capacity Supply Target Flowrates Heat load
Process Stream TS TT CP Q no. Type (F) (F) (104 BTU/h/F) (104 BTU/h) 1 Cold 2 Hot 3 Cold 4 Hot Tmin = 10 F QHmin = 50 104 BTU/h QCmin = 60 104 BTU/h
14
PINCH DECOMPOSITION DEFINES THE SEPARATE DESIGN TASKS!
260 2 250 4 240 1 240 3 C = 60 Btu/h H = 50 Btu/h Umin = 4 Umin = 3 PINCH DECOMPOSITION DEFINES THE SEPARATE DESIGN TASKS!
15
BELOW THE PINCH CP Q 190 2 3 190 4 4 G 60 190 3 4 1 ABOVE THE PINCH CP Q 260 2 1 250 4 2 235 H 2 1 20 90 240 H 1 3
16
Cp Q 260 1 3 2 250 2 4 C 4 60 235 H 2 3 4 1 240 H 1 3 THE COMPLETE MINIMUM UTILITY NETWORK
17
PINCH MATCH Pinch A Pinch Match Pinch 2 1 Exchanger 2 is not
Exchanger 2 is not a pinch match Pinch 1 Exchanger 3 is not a pinch match
18
FEASIBILITY CRITERIA AT THE PINCH
Rule 1: Check the number of process streams and branches at the pinch point Above the Pinch : PINCH PINCH 90 80 90 80 1 1 2 2 3 3 (80+T1) 4 4 (80+T2) Q1 5 5 Q2 Tmin = 10C Tmin = 10C
19
FEASIBILITY CRITERIA AT THE PINCH
Rule 1: Check the number of process streams and branches at the pinch point Below the Pinch : 90 80 (90-T1) 90 80 1 1 (90-T2) 2 2 3 3 4 4 Q1 5 5 Q2 PINCH PINCH Tmin = 10C
20
FEASIBILITY CRITERIA AT THE PINCH
Rule 2: Ensure the CP inequality for individual matches are satisfied at the pinch point. Above the Pinch : Below the Pinch : CPH1 CPC3 1 1 CPH2 CPC4 2 2 3 3 Q2 4 4 PINCH Q1 PINCH 1 T 2 T Tmin Tmin 3 4 Q Q Q2 Q1 CPC CPH CPC CPH
21
Stream data at the pinch NH NC? Yes No CPH CPC Split a for every
pinch match Split a cold stream No Yes Split a stream ( usually hot) Place pinch matches Figure Design procedure above the pinch. (From B. Linnhoff et al., 1982.)
22
Stream data at the pinch NH NC? Yes No CPH CPC Split a for every
pinch match Split a cold stream No Yes Split a stream ( usually hot) Place pinch matches Figure Design procedure below the pinch. (From B. Linnhoff et al., 1982.)
23
CRITERION #3 THE CP DIFFERENCE
ABOVE THE PINCH, INDIVIDUAL CP DIFFERENCE = CPC - CPH OVERALL CP DIFFERENCE = BELOW THE PINCH, INDIVIDUAL CP DIFFERENCE = CPH - CPC THE SUM OF THE INDIVIDUAL CP DIFFERENCES OF ALL PINCH MATCHES MUST ALWAYS BE BOUNDED BY THE OVERALL CP DIFFERENCE.
24
Overall CP Difference = 8 - 6 = 2
PINCH CP 4 2 5 3 Overall CP Difference = = 2 Total Exchanger CP Difference = = 2 O.K.
25
Overall CP Difference = 9 - 6 = 3
PINCH CP 4 2 5 3 1 Overall CP Difference = = 3 Total Exchanger CP Difference = = 2 O.K.
26
Overall CP Difference = 9 - 5 = 4
PINCH CP 3 2 8 1 Overall CP Difference = = 4 Total Exchanger CP Difference = = 6 Criterion violated !
27
Cp Q 260 1 3 2 250 130 2 4 C 4 60 235 180 135 H 2 3 4 1 240 H 1 3 Heat Load Loops heat loads can be shifted around the loop from one unit to another
28
4 H 2 3 H 2 4 1 H C 1 3 C Heat Load Loops heat loads can be shifted around the loop from one unit to another
29
260 1 3 2 250 130 2 C 4 60 235 H 2 3 1 240 H 1 3 Heat Load Path heat loads can be shifted along the path
30
4 H 2 3 H 2 1 H C 1 3 C Heat Load Path heat loads can be shifted along the path
31
Cp Q 260 1 3 2 2 250 C 4 60+X 235 165 2 3 H 1 20+X 240 H 1 3 X=7.5
32
Two ways to break the loop
If: L1>L4 L2>L3 then: X=L4 or X= -L3 1 1 2 2 3 4 (a) 3 L2 + X L4 - X 4 L3 + X L1 - X 1 2 3 2 1 4 3 4
33
heater/cooler can be included in a loop
1 3 4 2 (b) H1 - X 3 H L3 + X 4 H L4 - X H2 + X 1 H 3 4 3 4 Figure Complex loops and paths
34
Match 1 is not in the path 1 2 (c) 3 4 H 1 2 4 3 C 2 3 1 4 C H 4 2 3
C + X 3 L3 + X L4 - X 4 H L2 - X H + X H 1 2 4 2 3 4 3 C Figure Complex loops and paths
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.