Concluding Remarks
AIChE Spring Meeting and Global Congress on Process Safety
2019
2019 Spring Meeting and 15th Global Congress on Process Safety
Kister Distillation Symposium
Kister Distillation Symposium 2019: Honoring the Contributions of Greg Shinskey: A Jubilee of Advances in Distillation Control
Monday, April 1, 2019 - 12:20pm to 12:25pm
generate onâspecification product(s). In spite of the vast body of fundamental research and practical
design experience within the industry, the design and tuning of the regulatory controls, which plays a
pivotal role in achieving onâspecification production, became and remains largely a lost and dying art.
This is evidenced by the authorâs experience across multiple sites and companies wherein similar, if not
identical, controls design and controlâability issues were discovered and rectified on and around
distillation units, as well as by the precipitous drop in attendance of controlârelated sessions at industrial
and academic conferences.
Historically, there was a great amount of attention given to the design and performance of the
regulatory and advanced regulatory controls (ARC) implemented on distillation units. As more advanced
technologies came into common use, less attention was given to the underlying regulatory control
structures, in spite of the fact that it provides the foundation upon which the new technologies rely. IN
parallel to the shift in technology usage, the past decades have seen fundamental changes in the modus
operandi of refineries: the design and operations resemble that of chemical plants. This was primarily
the result of endâuser quality programs that propagated more stringent product specifications
âupstreamâ in the supply chain. Despite the changes to the operational criteria these tighter
specifications created, refinery designers have effectively maintained the historical âstatus quoâ,
especially regarding controls design.
With these technological and historical aspects in mind, this paper presents fundamental and practical
guidelines for designing robust and reliable control structures on these vital units. The authors draw
from 30 years of experience in process and controls design, and tuning such controls, on multiple units
across a wide array of refining, petrochemical and LPG/LNG plants. In addition to the guidelines, a
sampling of realâworld situations and the solutions for same will be presented to illustrate how the
principles are practically implemented. Topics included in the presentation will include:
- Only Two âHandlesâ for Every Distillation Tower
- Accumulator Level Control Myths
- Relative Gain Analysis Made Easy
- âClosing the Loopâ in Controls Design
- When Tray Temperatures act like Levels
- Flooded Condenser Design: Keep it Simple!
- APC: Love it, Hate it, Need it?