Fundamentals of Process Simulation for Beginners


Learn from Domain Experts!


Expert training for new process engineers on basics and applications of process simulation in the industry.



AspenTech is excited to offer a half day training for new process engineers to learn best practices in process simulation in the process industry. Learn the basic know-how of a simulation model and gain practical knowledge on troubleshooting through case studies on different industrial applications.


Instructor - Dr. Murugan Selvan


Dr. Murugan has over 25 years' experience in process simulation domain. His simulation modeling experience covers upstream gas/oil/water separations, sizing separators/Heat exchangers, Natural Gas Liquefaction (LNG), TEG Dehydration, Amine treatment of Sour to Sweet Gas, Methanol & Ammonia Synthesis via various sources, Sulfur Claus Plants, Novel Biomass conversion & Fuel-cell block models, Gas to Liquid reaction simulations, Refinery heat train with naphtha, atmospheric, and vacuum columns.


Dr. Murugan Selvan graduated with a Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering at The University of Alabama. 



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Audience:

New Process Engineers

Training Details

  • Course Id:

    ENG108

  • Duration:

    0.5 day(s)

  • CEUs Awarded:

    0.4

  • Level:

    Introductory

Benefits

Gain the practical skills and knowledge to begin modeling new and existing processes

Learn some practical techniques for building and troubleshooting flowsheet simulations


Approach

Gain the practical skills and knowledge to begin modeling new and existing processes

Learn some practical techniques for building and troubleshooting flowsheet simulations

Tasks




Pre-requisites

A background in chemical engineering or industrial chemistry


Agenda

Best Practices in Simulation


We will discuss the best practices in developing a simulation case whether it be a simple material balance recycle (or) one with columns. Making use simple shortcut column can help one understand the needs of designing a rigorous distillation or refining column. An approach to building a big flowsheet one step at a time with solution at every step instead of having the entire plant flow diagram built in one simulation exercise, will be discussed.


Recycle and Convergence criteria in a process flowsheet


Recycles are always a part of any process simulation (small or big process). It can be a material recycle, or a heat recycle via cross-exchanging heat from products to feed. Details of a component trapping example and how it can be resolved by appropriate process decisions. In this example, we will discuss the importance of initial guesses in tear streams, control of convergence tolerances, number of iterations, etc. using available methods. An example of a recycle due to columns contacting & stripping sour gases via a solvent will be discussed as well. 



TEG Dehydration Case Studies


TEG Dehydration is frequently practiced preventing the precipitation of water from gases when they are cooled the dew point is a more direct indication of the dehydration effectiveness than the absolute water content. We will discuss case studies to study the TEG composition in recirculation and its effect on water content in dry gas when all other flowsheet specifications are fixed. 


Troubleshooting Distillation Column


Usually, column convergence can be separated into operating specifications related or column hydraulics (insufficient contacting fluid per tray or column internals). High pressure drops, low product purity, insufficient reflux, low boil up (reboiler duty insufficient), fouling, etc. A specific column case of propane/propylene splitter will be discussed. We will limit our discussion to column Operating Specifications since Hydraulics require plant specific data on trays or packed column (collapsed tray, packed column internals fouling, tray/distributor plugging difficulties, etc.)




Email nala.training@aspentech.com if you have any questions.



Aspen Technology, Inc. awards Continuing Education Units (CEUs) for training classes conducted by our organization. One CEU is granted for every 10 hours of class participation.

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Aspen Technology, Inc. awards Continuing Education Units (CEUs) for training classes conducted by our organization. One CEU is granted for every 10 hours of class participation.