• SubTitle: Ismail Fahmi, University of Tulsa
  • Source: 12AIChE Conference • Pittsburgh, PA - November 1, 2012
  • Specific Source: Chemical Engineering Research and Design • Special Issue: Computer Aided Process Engineering (CAPE) Tools for a Sustainable World • Volume 91, Issue 8 •August 2013
  • Date: 2012-2013

Incorporating non-traditional feedstocks, e.g., biomass, to chemical process industry (CPI) requires investments in research & development (R&D) and capacity expansions. The impact of these investments on the evolution of biomass to commodity chemicals (BTCC) system should be studied to ensure a cost-effective transition with acceptable risk levels. The BTCC system includes both exogenous, e.g., product demands (decision-independent) and endogenous, e.g., the change in technology cost with investment levels (decision-dependent) uncertainties. This report presents a prototype simulation-based optimization (SIMOPT) approach to study the BTCC system evolution under exogenous and endogenous uncertainties, and provides a preliminary analysis of the impact of using three different sampling methods, i.e., Monte Carlo, Latin Hypercube, and Halton sequence, to generate the simulation runs on the computational cost of the SIMOPT approach. The results of a simplified case study suggest that annual demand increases is the dominant factor for the total cost of the BTCC system. The results also suggest that using Halton sequence as the sampling method yields the smallest number of samples, i.e., the least computational cost, to achieve a statistically significant solution

Project presented at

fahmi aiche

12AIChE ConferencePittsburgh, PA
November 1, 2012

Project published in

IChemE

Chemical Engineering Research and DesignSpecial Issue: Computer Aided Process Engineering (CAPE) Tools for a Sustainable World
Volume 91, Issue 8 •August 2013