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02/01/2007
By Jim Montague, Executive Editor
Is it soup yet? That’s the question that cooks and process control engineers must always ask and answer, and it leads to three follow ups—how good is my data? How soon can I get it? And, how much is it going to cost me?
Answering those questions is the goal, and meeting it is what the New Sampling/Sensor Initiative (NeSSI), its resulting ISA/ANSI SP76.00.02 standard, and its modular components reportedly do for process sampling systems. However, until now, there were few specific examples of NeSSI delivering its promised tens of percent improvements in installation time, reduced footprint and hardware, more efficient maintenance, fewer system leaks, better quality sampling data and greater uptime. Now a few end users and engineers finally are confirming the benefits gained by using this highly modular and reusable technology.
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Aiding Installation, Maintenance
INEOS Nitriles in Green Lake, Texas, has always produced acrylonitrile, a monomer for making plastics and nylon products. This process historically requires continual sampling to help turn raw propylene, ammonia, acetone and butane into finished acrylonitrile, acetonenitrile, acetone cyanohydrin and MAH catalyst.
However, a global comparison of all INEOS’ sites revealed in 2000 that Green Lake had two to four times as many analyzers as the chemical company’s other sites, according to Michael Hoffman, INEOS’ analyzer specialist. This high ratio of technicians to analyzer-unit-equivalents meant that proper maintenance might not be happening because staff had to spend too much time cleaning sample systems fouled by the analytical process, and manually performing tasks that should have been automated.
These problems inspired INEOS to seek and develop better sampling systems, which led it to the NeSSI and its SP76 standardized, flexible, reusable Generation 1 substrate and modules. Consequently, INEOS early adopted Swagelok’s MPC NeSSI-compliant components, which allow complex component layering on its substrate. These components already have been operating for several years in a few sampling applications.
First, INEOS’ engineers installed NeSSI modules and ¼-in. valves on two continuous emission monitoring system (CEMS) panels. The first panel took two men seven days to demolish and assemble because of its complex design layout, while the second took the pair three days, and reduced the panel’s footprint by 50%. One of the panels’ sections shrank from 8 sq ft to just 2 in. x 14 in.
| FIGURE 1: HEART OF GAS BYPASS | |
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INEOS Nitriles implemented a high-volume bypass to reduce maintenance on its reactor off-gas system using Swagelok’s MPC NeSSI-compliant substrate and modules.
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Next, after an unexpected hard failure of a primary gas analyzer, INEOS used its small, on-site inventory of MPC parts to help install a backup analyzer in just 2.5 hours. Hoffman says installing this many devices in such a short time would have been very difficult with traditional components.
Finally, INEOS also used a NeSSI-based optical flow cell developed by Applied Analytics Inc. to reduce the footprint of an optical measurement system to 1.6 in. x 7.75 in., which means it only requires an external flow controller. The facility also is integrating Horiba’s mass flow controllers for liquid and gas and Emerson Process Management’s flow controllers into its NeSSI systems.
“Despite these gains, there are still many people resisting and not wanting to consider NeSSI because they don’t want to expose themselves to the potential that a new sampling system might not work,” adds Hoffman. “However, the benefits outweigh the exposure, and there is no exposure and no problems if implementation is done properly upfront.”
Analyzer Accuracy = Trust
Because butyl rubber manufacturing is a sensitive process and because traditional sample handling systems (SHSs) have accuracy problems, engineers are skeptical of the data they get from on-line moisture analyzers via distributed control systems (DCS), says Jamie Canton, analyzer specialist at Lanxess Inc..
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