A numerical technique for Total Site sensitivity analysis
Total Site Heat Integration (TSHI) is a methodology for the integration of heat recovery among multiple processes and/or plants interconnected by common utilities on a site. Until now, it has not been used to analyze a site’s overall sensitivity to plant maintenance shutdown and production changes....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied thermal engineering 2012-07, Vol.40, p.397-408 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Total Site Heat Integration (TSHI) is a methodology for the integration of heat recovery among multiple processes and/or plants interconnected by common utilities on a site. Until now, it has not been used to analyze a site’s overall sensitivity to plant maintenance shutdown and production changes. This feature is vital for allowing engineers to assess the sensitivity of a whole site with respect to operational changes, to determine the optimum utility generation system size, to assess the need for backup piping, to estimate the amount of external utilities that must be bought and stored, and to assess the impact of sensitivity changes on a cogeneration system. This study presents four new contributions: (1) Total Site Sensitivity Table (TSST), a tool for exploring the effects of plant shutdown or production changes on heat distribution and utility generation systems over a Total Site; (2) a new numerical tool for TSHI, the Total Site Problem Table Algorithm (TS-PTA), which extends the well-established Problem Table Algorithm (PTA) to Total Site analysis; (3) a simple new method for calculating multiple utility levels in both the PTA and TS-PTA; and (4) the Total Site Utility Distribution (TSUD) table, which can be used to design a Total Site utility distribution network. These key contributions are clearly highlighted via the application of the numerical technique to two Case studies.
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► Total Site Sensitivity Table (TSST) is introduced for exploring the effects of total site operating variations. ► A new numerical tool for heat integration was developed, the Total Site Problem Table Algorithm (TS-PTA). ► A simple new method for calculating multiple utility levels for both the PTA and TS-PTA is described. ► The Total Site Utility Distribution (TSUD) table can be used to design the total site utility network. |
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ISSN: | 1359-4311 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2012.02.026 |