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Journal Article

Citation

Uygun K, Huang Y, Lou HH. Process. Saf. Environ. Prot. 2006; 84(2): 92-100.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Institution of Chemical Engineers and European Federation of Chemical Engineering, Publisher Hemisphere Publishing)

DOI

10.1205/psep.04075

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Process security is a newly pronounced issue facing the chemical process industry in the post 11 September era. Traditional safety is no longer sufficient for a chemical plant; it must also be secure. However, systematic and effective quantitative methodologies for process security analysis are necessary. To address this issue, the γ-analysis method was introduced very recently by Uygun et al. (2003) as a process security analysis framework. By that method, a process security problem need be formulated as a minimum-time (to reach disaster) control problem. The method combines Pontryagin's minimum principle (with some modifications) with a discretization scheme to transform the security problem from a single dynamic-optimization problem to multiple static optimization problems, hence solving the process security problem without extensive system simulations.

In this work, an improved γ-analysis method is introduced, which is featured by its first-order approximation to the time derivative function of a system model, as compared to the zero-order approximation during model discretization in the original implementation. This improvement can significantly reduce the number of optimization problems needed, thereby reducing computational requirements in on-line application. A reaction runaway example is studied to demonstrate the efficacy of the improved method, demonstrating that a 10-fold reduction in computational load can be achieved.

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