PLANT E – Distillation Column Process Distillation is a process used extensively in the chemical and petrochemical industries to separate liquid mixtures into their various components. The size and design of the column or columns and the operating pressure and temperature depend on many factors, such as the number of components in the feed, and the desired purity of the components to be separated. Distillation is achieved because of the different boiling points of the materials that are to be separated. Distillation creates a composition profile in the column. The lower boiling (lighter) components tend to concentrate in the vapor phase and the higher boiling (heavier) in the liquid phase. At zones in the column, the vapor and liquid phases are essentially the same temperature and pressure dependent on the efficiency of phase contact. Various kinds of devices such as random packing, structured packing, bubble cap trays, or sieve trays, etc. are used to bring the liquid and vapor phases into intimate contact and thus to enhance the separation. The feed material is introduced at one or more points along the column. Because of density differences, liquid runs down the column while vapor flows up. Liquid reaching the bottom of the column is partially vaporized in a heated reboiler to provide boil-up back to the column. Liquid may be withdrawn from the base of the column as bottoms product. Vapor reaching the top of the column is cooled and condensed to liquid in the overhead condenser. Part of the liquid is returned to the column as reflux (downcoming liquid). The remainder of the condensed liquid is withdrawn as distillate, or overhead product. The column section above the feed point is often called the rectifying section and that below the feed point is called the stripping section. In complex distillation operations, there can be multiple feed and draw off points, as well as multiple columns linked in a variety of ways. Lower pressures, i.e. vacuum, lower the boiling points of the components thus allowing separation to occur at lower temperatures. This is helpful if some materials are sensitive to high heat. Also, it can be less costly since lower pressure and temperature steam can be used at the heat source to the reboiler. Vacuum may also affect the difference in boiling curves of the compounds, thus improving ease of separation. This plant uses a packed distillation column under vacuum to separate an antifreeze-water mixture. The operating conditions and expected separation performance are based on computer simulations, the packing is a designed wire mesh Sulzer Inc. M25Y. A 40% water / 60% ethylene glycol (by weight) mixture is pumped by Pump P-506 from the feed tank (D-506) through two preheaters (E-502 and E-505) into the distillation tower (T-500). The internals of the column consist of two beds of structured packing, one above the feed point and one below. The bottoms of the tower are heated by thermosiphon reboiler (E-501) using 15 psig steam. (A thermosiphon circulates fluid based on density differences between the incoming liquid and the outgoing vapor/liquid mixture). The bottoms product is drawn from the reboiler inlet line with pump P-500, cooled by the cross-exchanger E-502, and returned to the feed tank. The vapor from the top of the column is condensed in exchanger E-500 and continuously collected in the reflux drum D-507. Condensate is pumped from D-507 with P-507 and split; a portion returns to the top section of the column as reflux, and the remainder recycles back to the feed tank. The column operates under vacuum by venting the reflux drum through condensing coils contained in a chilled water bath (E504) and then to vacuum pump VP-504. Any water condensed in the coils is collected in knock-out drum D-504. Cooling for E-504 is provided by chilled water circulated by a packaged chiller and pump unit (CH-504). Primary controls for the system consist of feed flow, feed temperature, base temperature, reflux flow, and system pressure. Feed temperature is controlled by varying steam flow to the preheater at TCV-505. Feed temperature should not exceed 135F to avoid flashing when operating at 120 mm Hg. At lower pressures, the temperature should be lowered accordingly. The flashing feed may cause damage to the column internals. Feed flow is controlled with FCV 500-1. Reflux is flow controlled with FCV 500-2. Base temperature is controlled with steam to the reboiler at TCV-501. System pressure is controlled at D-504 by automatically adjusting instrument air flow into the vacuum pump suction through PCV-504. Utility water is used to cool the condenser E-500 and to cool steam condensate at E-503. Steam is pressure controlled and supplied from steam generator SG-500. Because the column and reboiler are designated and stamped as ASME Section VIII pressure vessels, they are required to have pressure relief protection. The rupture disc (PSE-500) on the column head will relieve to prevent system pressure from exceeding that allowed by ASME Code. Note however that there is no credible way (short of a fire engulfing the column) to create pressure as high as the rupture disk burst pressure in the column. Overpressure is limited by the set pressure of the steam generator as well as by PSV-501 on the steam supply header to the reboiler. Precautions should be taken to prevent leaving steam or hot process fluid lined up to an exchanger while the cold side fluid is blocked in. PSV-502 protects the tube side of E-502 and E-505 from being overpressured if heat were to accidentally be left on the shell side with blocked in tubes. Distillate coming off the top of the column will pass through a RO unit to further remove any entrained salt. From the RO unit the water will then flow to a expansion tank were treatment of the water can occur prior to use. Instrumentation The plant is controlled by modicon PLC with WonderWare or Delta V providing the operational interface. In addition to the controls described above under PROCESS, this unit is fully field bus instrumented to gain an understanding of distillation principles and to aid in its stable operation. Additional controls include the column base level control (LIC 500/SC 500) and the reflux drum level control (LIC 507/SC 507). Other conditions monitored through the DCS include feed tank level, bottoms product flow and temperature, column temperature profile, column differential pressure, condensed overheads temperature, pressure and flow, and make-up air flow to the vacuum pump. Gauges on equipment and lines are also provided for safety and troubleshooting purposes. Analytical Conductivity will be measure at each step, outlet of distillation, outlet of RO unit and outlet of treatment to allow the student a hand on feel of water purification. Experimental Plant E will be used to present the following: 1) Basic principles of distillation, 2) normal operation of a distillation system including start-up and shutdown procedures, and 3) the adverse effects on distillation control due to upsets such as loss of reflux, changes to feed rate, loss of vacuum, changes to base temperature, etc.. At suggested operating conditions, computer simulations predict that this column is capable of producing an overhead product that is nearly pure water and contains less than 0.05% ethylene glycol by weight. Remember that this is based on normal feed compositions or 60% glycol / 40% water. Experiments will demonstrate the effect on the separation efficiency of variables such as temperature, pressure, and reflux flow. PLANT E – Distillation Column