A General Guide to Process Design Criteria - WittyWriter
A General Guide to Process Design Criteria
1.0 Introduction
This document provides a consistent, general-purpose design philosophy for process systems. It covers the selection of mechanical design conditions, equipment design principles, and instrumentation criteria to ensure safe, reliable, and cost-effective plant design.
Note: When available, project-specific or licensor-provided design criteria shall always take precedence over these general guidelines.
2.0 Selection of Mechanical Design Conditions
Equipment and piping must be designed for the most stringent coincidental conditions of pressure and temperature (both maximum and minimum) that can be encountered during all operating modes, including startup, shutdown, and upsets.
2.1 Design Pressure for Pressure Vessels
Internal Design Pressure
The design pressure for a pressurized system is set by the maximum operating pressure (MOP) plus a suitable margin.
Table 1: Mechanical Design Pressure Selection
Maximum Operating Pressure (MOP) Range
Mechanical Design Pressure shall be the Maximum of:
β€ 70 kg/cmΒ²g
MOP Γ 1.1
MOP + 2 kg/cmΒ²
A minimum of 3.5 kg/cmΒ²g
> 70 kg/cmΒ²g
MOP Γ 1.05
Columns: The design pressure is calculated at the top. The design pressure at the bottom is the top design pressure plus the column's pressure drop (ΞP) and the maximum hydrostatic head of the liquid in the sump.
Flare-Connected Systems: Equipment "floating" on a flare system should have a design pressure equal to the flare knock-out drum's design pressure (typically 3.5 to 7 kg/cmΒ²g minimum).
Pump and Compressor Discharge Systems
Piping and equipment in the discharge circuit of a pump or compressor require special consideration.
Centrifugal Pumps: The downstream system design pressure should be the pump's shut-off pressure. This is calculated as:
$P_{design} = P_{max\_suction} + \Delta P_{shutoff}$
Where $P_{max\_suction}$ is the upstream vessel's design pressure plus max static head, and $\Delta P_{shutoff}$ is the pump's differential head at zero flow (often estimated as 1.25 Γ $\Delta H_{rated}$).
Positive Displacement Pumps: The downstream design pressure should be the higher of 1.1 Γ $P_{rated}$ or $P_{rated}$ + 2 kg/cmΒ².
Compressors: The downstream design pressure is based on the maximum differential head at surge conditions, maximum speed, and maximum suction pressure.
Heat Exchangers (10/13 Rule): To avoid needing a relief device for a tube rupture, the low-pressure (LP) side is often designed so that its corrected hydrotest pressure is not less than the high-pressure (HP) side's design pressure. As a minimum, the LP side DP should be $10/13$ of the HP side DP.
External Design Pressure (Vacuum)
Equipment must be designed for full vacuum (FV) if it can be subjected to vacuum during any operation, including:
Normal operation (e.g., vacuum columns).
Startup, shutdown, or regeneration.
Steam-out procedures followed by cooling.
Vaporizing or condensing services.
Loss of heat input to a column.
Gravity draining of a liquid-full, blocked-in vessel or elevated exchanger.
2.2 Design Temperature
Maximum Design Temperature
The maximum design temperature is the maximum operating temperature plus a margin, typically 15Β°C.
Exceptions include:
Solar Radiation: Equipment exposed to the sun shall have a minimum design temperature of 65Β°C.
Steam-Out: The design temperature must be at least the temperature of the steam used for steam-out (e.g., LP steam temperature).
Air Coolers: Downstream equipment should be designed for the air cooler's *inlet* temperature, in case of a fan failure.
Compressor Discharge: Design temperature should be based on the calculated temperature at surge conditions.
Minimum Design Metal Temperature (MDMT)
The MDMT is the lowest temperature the equipment may experience, minus a margin (e.g., 3-5Β°C). This is critical for material selection to prevent brittle fracture.
Low temperatures can be caused by:
Low ambient site conditions.
Auto-refrigeration during depressurization (a "blowdown" event).
Process upsets or cryogenic services.
2.3 Corrosion Allowance
A corrosion allowance is added to the calculated material thickness to account for metal loss over the plant's life. Typical values depend on the service and material.
Table 2: Typical Corrosion Allowances
Material
Minimum Allowance (mm)
Carbon Steel
1.5 mm (3.0 mm for general refinery)
Alloy Steel
1.5 mm
Stainless Steel / Aluminium
0 mm (NIL)
Severe Service: For severe corrosive environments, such as "Wet HβS" (NACE) service, a higher allowance (e.g., 6.0 mm) may be required for carbon steel.
3.0 Equipment Design Philosophy
3.1 Vessels (Columns, Drums)
Vessel Sizing & Levels
Vessel L/D (Length/Diameter) ratios are typically 3 to 5 for horizontal vessels and 1.2 to 1.7 for vertical vessels. Liquid levels are defined as:
HHLL: High High Liquid Level (Trip)
HLL: High Liquid Level (Pre-alarm)
NLL: Normal Liquid Level (Control Set Point)
LLL: Low Liquid Level (Pre-alarm)
LLLL: Low Low Liquid Level (Trip)
Timing:
Surge Time (NLL β HLL): Time with no outflow.
Hold-up Time (NLL β LLL): Time with no inflow.
A minimum of 1-2 minutes or 150 mm should be provided between alarm (LLL/HLL) and trip (LLLL/HHLL) levels.
Table 3: Typical Residence Times (LLL to HLL)
Service
Minimum Residence Time (minutes)
Feed Surge Drum
15
Feed to Heaters / Columns
8 - 10
Reflux Drum / Column Bottom Sump
5
Compressor Suction KOD
3
The LLLL is typically set 150-300 mm above the bottom tangent line or pump suction nozzle.
Vessel Internals
Demisters: Vane packs or mesh pads should be specified to remove 99% of liquid droplets > 10 microns.
Vortex Breakers: Required on all liquid outlets connected to a pump suction or a control valve.
Vessel Nozzles
Minimum nozzle size: 50 NB (unclad), 80 NB (clad).
Vent/Drain sizes: 50 NB to 100 NB, depending on vessel volume.
Inlet nozzle momentum ($\rho_m v_m^2$) should be limited (e.g., < 1500 kg/mΒ·sΒ² with a distributor, < 3500 kg/mΒ·sΒ² for gas outlets).
Access Openings (Manways)
Minimum 600 NB manway required for any vessel needing internal access.
Packed Columns: Manways are needed for each bed, at each distributor, and below the bed support.
Tray Columns: Manways are needed at the feed tray, top, bottom, and at intermediate points (max 10m spacing).
3.2 Storage Tanks
Tank Types
Cone Roof Tank: For liquids with low vapor pressure (e.g., < 0.05 kg/cmΒ²a).
Floating Roof Tank (Internal or External): For liquids with higher vapor pressure (e.g., < 0.78 kg/cmΒ²a) or liquids stored near their flash point. Reduces VOC emissions.
Dome Roof Tank: For liquids with vapor pressure up to 1.05 kg/cmΒ²g (e.g., NGLs).
Tank Operating Levels
LLLL (Low Low Liquid Level): Set by pump NPSH requirements or, for floating roof tanks, ~300mm above the landed roof height to prevent the roof from landing during normal operation.
HLL to HHLL: Sized to provide ~15 minutes of operator response time at maximum inflow.
MLL (Maximum Liquid Level): The highest possible level, set by the HHLL trip plus thermal expansion and system response time. For floating roof tanks, this must be well below the top (~1800mm) to provide space for the roof.
3.3 Shell & Tube Heat Exchangers
Design oversurface: 5% minimum.
Velocities: Minimum 1.0 m/s for process fluids and cooling water to minimize fouling. Maximum 3.0 m/s for cooling water (in carbon steel) to prevent erosion.
Allowable ΞP: Typically 0.3 - 0.7 kg/cmΒ² for liquids, increasing with viscosity.
Fouling Factors: Based on service (e.g., 0.0004 hΒ·mΒ²Β·Β°C/kcal for cooling water).
Table 4: Preferred TEMA Type Selection
Shell Side Fouling
Tube Side Fouling
Preferred TEMA Type
High (> 0.0002)
High (> 0.0002)
Floating Head (e.g., AES, AET)
Low (β€ 0.0002)
High (> 0.0002)
Fixed Tube Sheet (e.g., BEM)
High (> 0.0002)
Low (β€ 0.0002)
"U" Tube Bundle (e.g., BEU)
Low (β€ 0.0002)
Low (β€ 0.0002)
Fixed Tube Sheet or "U" Tube
3.4 Air Cooled Heat Exchangers
Draft: Forced draft is preferred. Induced draft is used for low approach temperatures (< 8Β°C).
Approach: Lowest process outlet temperature should be 12Β°C above the dry bulb temperature.
Control: Outlet temperature is controlled by auto-variable blade angle fans or variable speed motors.
3.5 Fired Heaters
Design Margin: 10% on heat duty.
Efficiency: Minimum 90-92% should be targeted.
Features: Low NOx burners are preferred. Provisions for decoking are required for services subject to coking.
3.6 Pumps
Design Margins (on Normal Flow):
Process Pump: 10%
Reflux Pump: 20%
Reboiler Feed Pump: 15%
Recirculation/Intermittent: 0%
Sparing: 100% (1 operating + 1 spare) for continuous services. No spare for intermittent services.
NPSHa: NPSH available (NPSHa) must be at least 1.0 meter greater than NPSH required (NPSHr).
Minimum Continuous Flow (MCF)
Centrifugal pumps must be protected from operating below their minimum continuous flow to prevent vibration and seal damage. A recirculation line is required.
< 15 kW: Constant bypass flow through a restriction orifice.
β₯ 15 kW: Automatic flow-controlled bypass to save energy.
The MCF line should preferably be routed back to the upstream vessel, not the pump suction line, to dissipate heat.