Cumene B
Cumene B
Cumene B
Design Project
Production of Cumene
Process Description
Figure 1 is a preliminary process flow diagram (PFD) for the cumene production process.
The raw materials are benzene and propylene. The propylene feed contains 5 wt% propane as
an impurity, It is a saturated liquid at 25°C. The benzene feed, which may be considered
pure, is liquid at 1 atm and 25°C. Both feeds are pumped to about 3000 kPa by pumps P-201
and P-202, are then vaporized and superheated to 350°C in a fired heater (H-201). The fired
heater outlet stream is sent to a packed bed reactor (R-201) in which cumene is formed. There
are no side-reactions or by-products. The reactor effluent is sent to a flash unit (V-201) in
which light gases (mostly propane and propylene, some benzene and cumene) are separated as
vapor in Stream 9. Stream 10, containing mostly cumene and benzene is sent to a distillation
column (T-201) to separate benzene for recycle from cumene product. The desired cumene
production rate is 100,000 metric tons/yr.
Process Details
Feed Streams
Effluent Streams
Stream 9: fuel gas stream, credit may be taken for LHV of fuel
Equipment
Pump (P-201):
The pump increases pressure of the benzene feed from 1 atm to about 3000 kPa.
Pump operation may be assumed isothermal, and the cost of energy may be neglected.
(Both of these assumptions are valid for this semester’s design only.)
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Pump (P-202):
The pump increases the pressure of the propylene feed to about 3000 kPa.. Pump
operation may be assumed isothermal, and the cost of energy may be neglected. (Both
of these assumptions are valid for this semester’s design only.)
Reactor (R-201):
The reactor feed must be between 300°C - 400°C and between 2800 kPa - 3200 kPa.
Benzene must be present in at least 50% excess. Conversion of the limiting reactant is
92%. The reactor may be assumed isothermal, and the exothermic heat of reaction is
removed by vaporizing boiler feed water to make high-pressure steam. Credit may be
taken for the high-pressure steam.
C3 H 6 + C6 H 6 → C9 H12
propylene benzene cumene
Utility Costs
Low-Pressure Steam (446 kPa, saturated) $3.00/1000 kg
Electricity $0.05/kW hr
Data
Use data from References [1] or from any handbook (such as Reference [2]). The
following data are not readily available in these references.
Vapor Pressures
Vapor pressures may be interpolated or extrapolated from the following data:
Heat of formation
for cumene: 3.933 ´ 106 J/kmole
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 - other operating costs - 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 costs for cumene (the product) and benzene (the feed) should be obtained from the
Chemical Marketing Reporter, which is in the Evansdale Library. The “impure” propylene
feed is $0.095/lb.
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 each piece of equipment will
be provided by Spring Break. You will learn to calculate the annuity value in ChE 38.
Other Information
You should assume that a year equals 8000 hours. This is about 330 days, which allows
for periodic shut-down and maintenance.
You should assume that two streams that mix must be at identical pressures. Pressure
reduction may be accomplished by adding a valve. These valves are not shown on the
attached flowsheet, and it may be assumed that additional valves can be added as needed.
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. Any report not containing
a labeled PFD and a stream table will be considered unacceptable. When presenting results
for different cases, graphs are greatly superior to tables. The report appendix should contain,
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for the optimal case, details of calculations that are easy to follow. These calculations may be
(neatly) hand-written. Calculations which can not be followed easily will lose credit.
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 five-minute question-and-answer session will follow. Instructions for
presentation of oral reports will be provided in a separate document. 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.
As mentioned in the cover memo, the written project report is due upon presentation of the
oral report. The oral reports will be Monday, April 22, 1995 (ChE 38 class) and Wednesday,
April 24, 1995 (ChE 41 class). There will be a project review on Friday, April 26, 1995 (ChE
41 class). In addition, everyone must attend at least one (and preferably both) of the senior
design presentations, either on Tuesday, April 23, 1995, or on Thursday, April 25, 1995
(substitutes for Thursday ChE 38 class). Furthermore, attendance is required of all students
during their classmates’ presentations (this means in the room, not in the hall or the lounge).
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,
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
1. Felder, R.M. and R.W. Rousseau, Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes (2nd ed.),
Wiley, New York, 1986.
2. Perry, R.H. and D. Green, eds., Perry’s Chemical Engineering Handbook (6th ed.),
McGraw-Hill, New York, 1984, p. 9-74.