A unified total site heat integration targeting method for isothermal and non-isothermal utilities

This paper presents a new unified Total Site Heat Integration (TSHI) targeting methodology that calculates improved TSHI targets for sites that requires isothermal (e.g. steam) and non-isothermal (e.g. hot water) utilities. The new method sums process level utility targets to form the basis of Total...

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Main Authors: Amir, H. Tarighaleslami, Timothy, G. Walmsley, Martin, J. Atkins, Michael, R. W. Walmsley, Liew, Peng Yen, James, R. Neale
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2017
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/66499/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.energy.2016.12.071
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spelling my.utm.664992017-10-03T13:32:41Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/66499/ A unified total site heat integration targeting method for isothermal and non-isothermal utilities Amir, H. Tarighaleslami Timothy, G. Walmsley Martin, J. Atkins Michael, R. W. Walmsley Liew, Peng Yen James, R. Neale T Technology This paper presents a new unified Total Site Heat Integration (TSHI) targeting methodology that calculates improved TSHI targets for sites that requires isothermal (e.g. steam) and non-isothermal (e.g. hot water) utilities. The new method sums process level utility targets to form the basis of Total Site utility targets; whereas the conventional method uses Total Site Profiles based excess process heat deficits/surpluses to set Total Site targets. Using an improved targeting algorithm, the new method requires a utility to be supplied to and returned from each process at specified temperatures, which is critical when targeting non-isothermal utilities. Such a constraint is not inherent in the conventional method. The subtle changes in procedure from the conventional method means TSHI targets are generally lower but more realistic to achieve. Three industrial case studies representing a wide variety of processing industries, are targeted using the conventional and new TSHI methods, from which key learnings are found. In summary, the over-estimation of TSHI targets for the three case studies from using the conventional method compared to new method are 69% for a New Zealand Dairy Factory, 8% for the Södra Cell Värö Kraft Pulp Mill, and 12% for Petrochemical Complex. Elsevier 2017-01-01 Article PeerReviewed Amir, H. Tarighaleslami and Timothy, G. Walmsley and Martin, J. Atkins and Michael, R. W. Walmsley and Liew, Peng Yen and James, R. Neale (2017) A unified total site heat integration targeting method for isothermal and non-isothermal utilities. Energy, 119 . pp. 10-25. ISSN 0360-5442 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.energy.2016.12.071 DOI:10.1016/j.energy.2016.12.071
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic T Technology
spellingShingle T Technology
Amir, H. Tarighaleslami
Timothy, G. Walmsley
Martin, J. Atkins
Michael, R. W. Walmsley
Liew, Peng Yen
James, R. Neale
A unified total site heat integration targeting method for isothermal and non-isothermal utilities
description This paper presents a new unified Total Site Heat Integration (TSHI) targeting methodology that calculates improved TSHI targets for sites that requires isothermal (e.g. steam) and non-isothermal (e.g. hot water) utilities. The new method sums process level utility targets to form the basis of Total Site utility targets; whereas the conventional method uses Total Site Profiles based excess process heat deficits/surpluses to set Total Site targets. Using an improved targeting algorithm, the new method requires a utility to be supplied to and returned from each process at specified temperatures, which is critical when targeting non-isothermal utilities. Such a constraint is not inherent in the conventional method. The subtle changes in procedure from the conventional method means TSHI targets are generally lower but more realistic to achieve. Three industrial case studies representing a wide variety of processing industries, are targeted using the conventional and new TSHI methods, from which key learnings are found. In summary, the over-estimation of TSHI targets for the three case studies from using the conventional method compared to new method are 69% for a New Zealand Dairy Factory, 8% for the Södra Cell Värö Kraft Pulp Mill, and 12% for Petrochemical Complex.
format Article
author Amir, H. Tarighaleslami
Timothy, G. Walmsley
Martin, J. Atkins
Michael, R. W. Walmsley
Liew, Peng Yen
James, R. Neale
author_facet Amir, H. Tarighaleslami
Timothy, G. Walmsley
Martin, J. Atkins
Michael, R. W. Walmsley
Liew, Peng Yen
James, R. Neale
author_sort Amir, H. Tarighaleslami
title A unified total site heat integration targeting method for isothermal and non-isothermal utilities
title_short A unified total site heat integration targeting method for isothermal and non-isothermal utilities
title_full A unified total site heat integration targeting method for isothermal and non-isothermal utilities
title_fullStr A unified total site heat integration targeting method for isothermal and non-isothermal utilities
title_full_unstemmed A unified total site heat integration targeting method for isothermal and non-isothermal utilities
title_sort unified total site heat integration targeting method for isothermal and non-isothermal utilities
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2017
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/66499/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.energy.2016.12.071
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