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Cost
estimating for chemical engineering plant design
This color indicates a
link available via Clarkson University
Instructions to
access library resources from off campus (or insert http://horizon.clarkson.edu:2048/login?url=
before the URL in a link)
·
Cost
estimating advice
·
Perry's Chemical Engineers' Handbook (8th Edition)
or 7th Edition Chapter 9. Includes capital costs for several plants,
equations for some equipment, etc.
·
Oil & Gas Journal (search plant costs,
chemical prices, Nelson-Farrar refinery construction index, refinery operating
costs)
·
Quizzes,
glossary, equipment cost estimator
·
“Handbook of Petrochemicals Production Processes,” Robert A.
Meyers, editor, McGraw-Hill (2005), 665.538 H236. Requirements for capital investment, raw materials
and utilities for many common petrochemicals.
Chemicals, raw materials and
products: CAUTION:
Prices for laboratory quantities are much higher than for the commercial
quantities that you would use for plant design economic calculations. Don't use the costs of raw materials and
products given in the text. If you
search the internet, use “price” rather than “cost.”
- Wilson Web: on campus;
(Search price OR cost AND chemical’s name). Includes the following three:
- Chemical Week (Search to find articles about
particular chemicals, such as manufacturers, production rates, prices)
- Chemistry and Industry (Click on one issue, and then
Find to search for news about particular chemicals from many sources).
- Purchasing.com/
- Chemical & Engineering News. See “Facts and Figures for the Chemical
Industry,” usually in June or July issue. Production rates of common
chemicals versus time. Magazine: TP1 .C35
- Noble metals (silver, platinum, rhodium,
iridium) as used in small percentages in catalysts: use google or similar
search engine to find price on line for quantity needed.
Platinum compounds
- Producer
Price Indices U.S. Government statistics for price movement (but not
actual prices): “The Producer Price Index (PPI)
program measures the average change
over time in the selling prices received by domestic producers for their
output.”
- Polymer prices
- Oxygen costs
- Search “chemical name price” at http://findarticles.com/ (unfortunately
with annoying popups that may not be prevented)
- Directory of engineering products and
supplies Laboratory chemical suppliers often provide prices. Suitable for rough estimation of
catalyst costs. Also google “chemical
suppliers.”
Utilities
costs
Lower
costs than those found below may be negotiated with local suppliers when large
quantities are to be used. To obtain the
costs per GJ required by CAPCOST, it is
necessary to use the higher
heating value (HHV), which is also known as “Energy content,” “Btu
content,” “Heating value,” and “Calorific Value.” Basically, it is the heat of combustion with
liquid water as the product. For natural
gas the HHV depends on composition, and is approximately 1030 Btu/ft3
(at 30 Torr and 60oF). Fuel
oil #2 is about 140,000 Btu/gal and bituminous coal is ~30 MJ/kg. See Conversion factors
between energy units.
- Energy
Information Agency
- Natural gas
prices ; Industrial
price versus time
- Coal
(heating values are per pound)
- #2 fuel oil
(Same as #2 distillate.)
- Electricity
costs by sector and state (best site for large industrial usage)
- Electricity, fuel oil,
natural gas for consumers
- Historical data for
commodities
- Consumer price
index since 1913
- Credits for steam or
electricity produced should be deducted from the Cost of Manufacturing
and not included in sales of product(s).
- Cost
estimation: fuels, electricity, waste treatment
- Plot of $/GJ from 1970
through 2006 for natural gas, gasoline, fuel oils, wood & solid
wastes, coal and nuclear. Shows
recent inflation rates.
- Fuel
Value Calculator giving net heating value for natural gas, propane,
wood, fuel oil, coal, switchgrass, shelled corn and electricity.
Waste treatment costs
- Methods and
costs of treating waste water and gas.
- Waste gas: Take a credit for a
combustible (fuel) waste gas that is at a concentration above the upper
flammability limit as the cost of an equivalent amount of natural gas
based on its lower heating value (LHV).
(Tabulations
of data.) The same can be done
if the combustible components are present below the lower flammability
limit, but sufficient oxygen is present for catalytic combustion to
recover the LHV. HYSYS gives the
LHV for a stream under the Properties tab.
If the gas is below the lower flammability limit and consists of
components that can be burned to CO2 and H2O, assume
that these components are eliminated in a flame at a
cost of $0.005/kg. Any products not permitted to be
exhausted (such as SO2 in many places) must be removed before
the gas is released. Charge $0.20
per kg of materials that must be removed.
Assume these are 2001 prices; update the burning cost using the
price of natural gas and the waste treatment cost by the price of
electricity.
- Waste water: Charge $0.25 per kg of components that must be
removed before discharge of the water.
This cost is for 2001, so update using the cost of electricity.
Wages and benefits
Equipment sizing: Before
the cost of equipment can be estimated its size must be determined. Similarly, the utilities requirements must be
calculated. Note
that HYSYS/UniSim uses inappropriate default values when the units are first
entered, e.g. tower diameter and heat exchanger area. Do not use these default values for cost
estimation.
- Sizing heat
exchangers Warning: The part of HYSYS/UniSim installed at
Clarkson University does not calculate heat transfer coefficients
correctly. It only calculates q/DTavg and
gives this as UA (i.e., it sets F=1) .
The shell area sometimes shown under the Sizing tab is calculated
from the default dimensions of the heat exchanger, and the U given by
HYSYS/UniSim is calculated by dividing UA by this meaningless A. (Make certain you know how HYSYS/UniSim
calculates UA.)
- Sizing
condensers & reboilers using HYSYS/UniSim For heat exchangers that condense
steam or boil water fed at saturation, the temperature of the water-steam
is fixed by the pressure and would be constant if its pressure drop in the
heat exchanger were 0. The flow rate
of the water-steam is calculated by dividing the Q by the latent heat of
evaporation at that pressure. If
the boiler feed water (bfw) is below saturation, calculation of the heat
exchanger should be broken into two parts -- one to heat the bfw up to the
saturation temperature and a second to evaporate all of it. Similarly, if superheated steam is fed,
for calculation purposes break the heat exchanger into one that cools the
steam to saturation and a second that condenses it to saturated water.
- Fired heaters: Everything you need to cost fired
heaters is in most design texts, CPC texts, and Perry’s. The cost depends on the duty and the
process stream heated. The utility
(fuel) cost is determined by dividing the duty by the lower heating value
of the fuel and the efficiency.
- Alternate
heating methods, temperatures, costs
- When a reactor is either
heated or cooled, cost it as the sum of the cost of a heat exchanger plus
that of a vessel. For a plug flow
reactor, you calculate the area from the tube diameter, length and
numbers. For a fluidized bed
reactor use the Q and Ts to calculate the area as for other heat
exchangers.
- Do not forget to have spare
pumps, as they tend to require maintenance more often than other
units.
- Make certain to select the type
of compressor required for your conditions, e.g. do not use a
blower or fan unless the pressure increase is very small. Spare compressors are not advised.
Equipment
and capital investment
- Chapter
9 in Perry's
- Chapter 20 in Walas (pre 1990)(copied into Appendix C
of Process Engineering Economics)
- "Conceptual Cost Estimating Manual" (many graphs of cost versus size
as of January 1, 1996)
- On-line
equipment cost estimator courtesy of Peters, Timmerhaus and West
(2003)
- On-line estimator
with useful references, from Matche
- Materials selection and costs
- All costs should be for the present
time, or estimated for the proposed construction time.
Use the Chemical Engineering Plant Cost Index (CE index, or CEPCI)
or another cost index to update equipment costs: last page of
each issue of Chemical Engineering:
TP1 .C3. For recent
data on line, Chemical Engineering (get
ID & PW from your instructor).
Alternatives are the Engineering News-Record Construction Cost Index (AD login,
Economics, Current Costs; old issues TA1.e6), the Marshall
& Swift Equipment Cost Index (at the Chemical Engineering link above),
and the Nelson-Farrar Refinery Cost Index (search Nelson-Farrar or
Economics at the Oil and Gas Journal). Chemical Engineering magazine and the
Oil & Gas Journal also include cost indices for individual types of
equipment.
- Plots of CE,
Nelson-Farrar refinery cost and Marshall & Swift indices from 1970
through 2006.
·
“Richardson
Process Plant Construction Cost Estimating Standards: The Richardson Rapid
System,” Cost Data On Line, Inc. (CD & www.costdataonline.com)(2009). Excellent source of cost
estimating methods. 1999 edition in the Clarkson Library at Ref
692.5 R522p
·
Separation
cost versus concentration (Sherwood plots)
- Use pie charts to show graphically
what the major cost items are to help you decide where to work on
improving the economics of the plant.
It is recommended to have one pie chart for equipment and another
for manufacturing costs. Rather
than include the entire raw material cost as a manufacturing expense,
include only the portion that is not converted to sellable product. If you are having difficulty showing a
profit, it is probably because you are converting an insufficient fraction
of the raw material to sellable product because of poor selectivity in
your reactor and/or because of poor separations. Take a particular look at compressors,
as they are expensive to purchase and to operate. Could a pump be used instead, e.g. by
first condensing the stream? Should
two compressors be used with a heat exchanger in between?
- Optimization:
Before adjusting the operating parameters of individual units to
cut costs, first consider rearranging, adding or subtracting units in your
pfd. Consider using more than one reactor
in series and more than one heat exchanger in series. For example, if you want to cool a
stream to below 0oC, you can cool it part way by boiling water
in one exchanger, some more with cooling water in a second exchanger, and
finally with refrigerant in a third.
- Capital
Costs Quickly Estimated
Calculation
of NPV, DCFRR and payback period.
- Example
spreadsheet & plot for cash flow profitability analysis. Simple example of use of Excel’s goal
seek to calculate interest rate from periodic (annuity)
payments.
- Make certain you do your MACRS
depreciation, cash flow, and discounted cash flow calculations
correctly. Note that a 5-year MACRS
takes place over a 6-year period, because the first and last years are
considered half years. At the end
of 6 years of production, the book value should be 0.
- MACRS
recovery period for chemical manufacturing ; MACRS depreciation
rates (from IRS
publication 946)
- Do not show depreciation as a
cost or expense, except for calculation of income tax.
- Corporate
income tax rate (for corporate taxable incomes over $18,333,333) If a state is not shown, that state does
not tax corporate income, in an effort to attract industry.
- Do not forget to estimate
reasonable values for land and working capital, and indicate how you
arrived at these numbers. Remember
to recover these costs in the last year of operation.
- It is a serious mistake to
calculate the sum of the discounted cash flows by dividing the sum of the
cash flows by (1+i)n.
- Instructions on use of Turton
et al.’s Excel program CAPCOST.
Clarkson University's Department of
Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Disclaimer: The material on this page
is intended for instructional purposes by Clarkson University students
only. Neither Clarkson University nor
Professor Wilcox is responsible for problems caused by using this information.
W.R. Wilcox. Last updated April 24, 2010.
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