Abstract:
This study focused on heat exchanger network and thermal heat integration in the Finchaa
sugar production plant using the Aspen Energy Analyzer v11.0 software through the principle
of pinch analysis techniques. The aim of this retrofit heat exchanger network design is to
reduce the use of external utilities by increasing energy recovery and shifting heat from
available hot process stream to cold process streams which needs heating by applying the
principles of the first and second law of thermodynamics, the increasing cost of energy and
environmental concerns are forcing industries to look for methods of reducing energy
consumption and wastage. Identifying the optimum heat exchanger network that was achieved
the minimum energy target (supreme heat recovery) and economic savings were realized in
the study area. Both primary and secondary data sources were collected for this investigation.
Primary data were collected from operators of the company through an interview at each
stage unit operations, and secondary data were collected from the manual document of the
production section, journals, and textbooks of related articles. In this design, the problem is
a threshold problem that requires only hot utility. The network was designed for maximum
energy recovery and optimized at the minimum total cost with further relaxation of breaking
ten loops. The trade-off production (utility) cost with capital cost obtained an optimal heat
exchanger network topology designed was not too changed from the existing plant network.
The analyses exposed that the number of heat exchanger units was significant with target
value but, the number of shells designed was above target value by 48.5%. In the study area,
the amount of hot utility requirement is 25,960kW and it remains constant as ΔTmin varies up
to the threshold temperature (5℃), which is the optimum approach temperature change
value. The heat exchanger network design resulted in energy savings of 100% for cold
utilities, 47.91% for hot utilities and 64.92% from total utility compared with the current
energy consumption of the plant. Profitability analysis of the designed heat exchanger
network was made in both discount and non-discount cash flow methods. The non-discount
criteria found with a payback period and accounting rate of return of 0.91years (nine months)
and 90.40% respectively. Similarly, the discount criteria found with net present value (NPV)
and internal rate of return (IRR) of $2,369,786.297 within 20 years and 18.0609%
respectively, which indicates this project has an acceptance. The results show that the design
of the heat exchanger network with a new heat exchanger arrangement proves that energy
integration can lead to a minimum energy (utility) consumption, maximum energy recovery,
and financial savings of the plant