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WIlllAM
1.
LUYBENWILLIAM
1.
LUYBEN
I
PROCESS MODELING,PROCESS MODELING,
l
SIMULATION
AND
SIMULATION
AND
\
CONTROL
iOR
5
CONTROL
FlitI
m
CHEMICAL ENGINEERS
m
SECOND
EDITION-
I
a
I
1
L
McGraw-Hill Chemical Engineering Series
’
Editorial Advisory Board
James
J. Carberry,
Profissor of Chemical Engineering, University of Notre Dame
James R. Fair,
Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Texas, Austin
WilUum
P. Schowalter,
Professor of Chemical Engineering, Princeton University
Matthew
Tirrell,
Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Minnesota
James
Wei,
Professor of Chemical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Max S. Petem, Emeritus, Professor of Chentical Engineering, University
of
Colorado
Building the Literature of a Profession
Fifteen prominent chemicalengineers first met in New York more than 60 years
ago to plan a continuing literature for their rapidly growing profession. From
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Available at Your College Bookstore
PROCESS MODELING,
SIMULATION, AND
CONTROL FOR
CHEMICAL ENGINEERS
Second Edition
William L. Luyben
Process ModelingandControl Center
Department of Chemical Engineering
Lehigh University
McGraw-Hill
Publisbing
Company
New
York St. Louis San Francisco Auckland Bogota Caracas Hamburg
Lisbon London Madrid Mexico Milan Montreal New Delhi
Oklahoma City Paris San Juan
SHo
Paul0
Singapore Sydney Tokyo Toronto
PROCESS MODELING, SIMULATION, ANDCONTROL FOR
CHEMICAL ENGINEERS
INTERNATIONAL EDITION 1996
Exclusive rights by McGraw-Hill Book
Co
Singapore for
manufacture and export. This book cannot be m-exported
from the country to which it is consigned by McGraw-Hill.
567690BJEPMP9432
Copyright e 1999, 1973 by McGraw-Hill, Inc.
All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the United States Copyright
Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in
any form or by any means, or stored in a data base or retrieval system,
u
without the prior written permission of the publisher.
This book was set in Times Roman.
The editors were Lyn Beamesderfer and John M.
Morris.%
The production supervisor was Friederich W. Schulte.
The cover was designed by John Hite.
Project supervision was done by Harley Editorial Services.
Ubrury of Congress Cataloging-in-Publlcatlon Data
William L. Luyben 2nd ed.
p.
cm.
Bibliography: p.
Includes index.
ISBN
6-67-639159-9
1. Chemical process-Math
data processing., 3. Chemica
TP155.7.L66
1969 ,
669.2’61-dc19
When ordering this title use ISBN
1
process
No.DEADQUiSICION
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
William L. Luyben received his B.S. in Chemical Engineering from the Penn-
sylvania State University where he was the valedictorian of the Class of 1955. He
worked for Exxon for five years at the
Bayway
Refinery and at the Abadan
Refinery (Iran) in plant. technical service and design of petroleum processing
units. After earning a Ph.D. in 1963 at the University of Delaware, Dr. Luyben
worked for the Engineering Department of DuPont in process dynamics and
control of chemical plants. In 1967 he joined Lehigh University where he is now
Professor of Chemical Engineering and Co-Director of the ProcessModeling and
Control Center.
Professor Luyben has published over 100 technical papers and has
authored or coauthored four books. Professor Luyben has directed the theses of
over 30 graduate students. He is an active consultant for industry in the area of
process controland has an international reputation in the field of distillation
column control. He was the recipient of the
Beckman
Education Award in 1975
and the
Instrumqntation
Technology Award in 1969 from the Instrument Society
of America.
f
r ,
.,y<i
‘.,
Overall,
he
has devoted
ove$?
3$,years to, his profession as a teacher,
researcher, author, and practicing en&eer:
:.:
’
!
1.
I’
vii
This book is dedicated to
Robert L. Pigford and Page S. Buckley,
two authentic pioneers
in process modeling
and process control
CONTENTS
1
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
1.6
Part I
Preface
Introduction
1
Examples of the Role of Process Dynamics
and Control
Historical Background
Perspective
Motivation for Studying Process Control
General Concepts
Laws and Languages of Process Control
1.6.1
Process Control Laws
1.6.2
Languages of Process Control
1
6
7
8
8
11
11
12
Mathematical Models of
Chemical Engineering Systems
Xxi
2
Fundamentals
2.1
Intreduction
2.1.1
Uses of Mathematical Models
2.1.2 Scope of Coverage
2.1.3
Principles of Formulation
2.2
Fundamental Laws
2.2.1 Continuity Equations
2.2.2 Energy Equation
2.2.3
Equations of Motion
2.2.4 Transport Equations
2.2.5
Equations of State
2.2.6 Equilibrium
2.2.7 Chemical Kinetics
Problems
15
15
15
16
16
17
17
23
27
31
32
33
36
38
xi
I
4
Xii CONTENTS
3
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
3.5
3.6
3.7
3.8
3.9
3.10
3.11
3.12
3.13
3.14
Part II
Examples of Mathematical Models
of Chemical Engineering Systems
Introduction
Series of Isothermal, Constant-Holdup CSTRs
CSTRs With Variable Holdups
Two Heated Tanks
Gas-Phase, Pressurized CSTR
Nonisothermal CSTR
Single-Component Vaporizer
Multicomponent Flash Drum
Batch Reactor
Reactor With Mass Transfer
Ideal Binary Distillation Column
Multicomponent Nonideal Distillation Column
Batch Distillation With Holdup
pH
Systems
3.14.1 Equilibrium-Constant Models
3.14.2 Titration-Curve Method
Problems
Computer Simulation
40
40
41
43
44
45
46
51
54
57
62
64
70
72
74
74
75
77
4 Numerical Methods
89
4.1
Introduction
89
4.2
Computer Programming
90
4.3
Iterative Convergence Methods
91
4.3.1 Interval Halving
93
4.3.2 Newton-Raphson Method
96
4.3.3 False Position
100
4.3.4
Explicit Convergence Methods
101
4.35 Wegstein
103
4.3.6 Muller Method
103
4.4
Numerical Integration of Ordinary Differential Equations
105
4.4.1
Explicit Numerical Integration Algorithms
106
4.4.2 Implicit Methods
113
Problems
114
5
Simulation Examples
5.1
Gravity-Flow Tank
5.2
Three CSTRs in Series
5.3
Nonisothermal CSTR
5.4
Binary Distillation Column
5.5
Multicomponent Distillation Column
5.6 Variable Pressure Distillation
5.6.1
Approximate Variable-Pressure Model
5.6.2
Rigorous Variable-Pressure Model
116
116
119
124
129
132
141
141
142
[...]... controller) and feed the difference (the error) into a feedback controller that will change a manipulated variable to drive the controlled variable back to the desired value Information is thus “fed back” from the controlled variable to a manipulated variable, as sketched in Fig 1.7 4 Feedforward control The basic idea is shown in Fig 1.8 The disturbance is detected as it enters the processand an appropriate... time for a second edition In the area of process control, new methods of analysis and synthesis of control systems have been developed and need to be added to the processcontrol engineer’s bag of practical methods The driving force for much of this development was the drastic increase in energy costs in the 1970s This led to major redesigns of many new and old processes, using energy integration and. .. have indeed been blessed Alhamdulillahi! William L Luyben PROCESS MODELING, SIMULATION, AND CONTROLFOR CHEMICAL ENGINEERS CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION This chapter is an introduction to process dynamics and controlfor those students who have had little or no contact or experience with real chemical engineering processes The objective is to illustrate where processcontrol fits into the picture and to indicate... Control Systems and Hardware Control Instrumentation 7.1.1 Sensors 7.1.2 Transmitters 7.1.3 Control Valves 7.1.4 Analog and Digital Controllers 7.1.5 Computing and Logic Devices Performance of Feedback Controllers 7.2.1 Specifications for Closedloop Response 7.2.2 Load Performance Controller Tuning 7.3.1 Rules of Thumb 7.3.2 On-Line Trial and Error 7.3.3 Ziegler-Nichols Method Problems 8 Advanced Control. .. Sampled-Data Control of Processes With Deadtime Sampled-Data Control of Openloop Unstable Processes Problems Xix 702 705 709 Appendix Instrumentation Index Hardware 711 721 PREFACE The first edition of this book appeared over fifteen years ago It was the first chemical engineering textbook to combine modeling, simulation, and control It also was the first chemical engineering book to present sampled-data... compositions and temperatures on all the trays Note that one physical stream may be considered to contain many variables: Feed flow rate fi Load disturbances Feed composition z w Distillate composition xg Bottom composition x,, 1 Level reflux drum ~ MR Controlled variables Manipulated variables Uncontrolled variables i i FIGURE 1.6 10 PROCESS MODELING, Disturbance SIMULATION, AND CONTROLFOR CHEMICAL ENGINEERS. .. costs and with the development of more severe, higher-capacity, higher-performance equipment and processes in the 1940s and early 195Os, it became uneconomical and often impossible to run plants without automatic control devices At this stage feedback controllers were added to the plants with little real consideration of or appreciation for the dynamics of the process itself Rule-of-thumb guides and. .. Manipulated variable Controlled variable c Process I Measurement device 7 Control valve +* FIGURE 1.7 Feedback control loop flow rate, its composition, its temperature, etc., i.e., all its intensive and extensive properties its 3 Feedback control The traditional way to control a process is to measure the variable that is to be controlled, compare its value with the desired value (the setpoint to the controller)... this book exploring this important design and operating problem All our studies of mathematical modeling, simulation, andcontrol theory are aimed at understanding the dynamics of processes andcontrol systems so that we can develop and design better, more easily controlled plants that operate more efficiently and more safely For now let us say merely that the control system shown in Fig 1.5 is a typical... simplest control system that will do the job is the best Complex elegant control systems look great on paper but soon end up on “manual” in an industrial environment Bigger is definitely not better in control system design (2) SECOND LAW You must understand the process before you can control it 12 PROCESS MODELING, SIMULATION, AND CONTROLFOR CHEMICAL ENGINEERS No degree of sophistication in the control . 1. LUYBEN I PROCESS MODELING ,PROCESS MODELING, l SIMULATION AND SIMULATION AND CONTROL iOR 5 CONTROL FlitI m CHEMICAL ENGINEERS m SECOND EDITION- I a I 1 L McGraw-Hill Chemical Engineering. Your College Bookstore PROCESS MODELING, SIMULATION, AND CONTROL FOR CHEMICAL ENGINEERS Second Edition William L. Luyben Process Modeling and Control Center Department of Chemical Engineering Lehigh. Handbook of Natural Gas Engineering King: Separation Processes Luyben: Process Modeling, Simulation, and Control for Chemical Engineers McCabe, Smitb, J. C., and Harriott: Unit Operations of Chemical