The impact of altering feed tray locations (for the purpose of saving energy) on the controllability of double feed reactive distillation (RD) columns is evaluated for two case studies: a hypothetical ideal RD column and a methyl acetate RD column. Energy savings of 18.3% and 36.4% over the conventional design (feed immediately above and below the reactive zone) is achieved for the ideal and methyl acetate systems, respectively. A steady-state bifurcation analysis shows that, for both systems, output multiplicity, with respect to reboiler duty, occurs at a fixed reflux rate for the different designs (conventional/altered feed tray location). The output multiplicity is eliminated at a fixed reflux ratio. Closed-loop dynamic simulation results show that the controllability of the internally heat integrated ideal RD column deteriorates, compared to the conventional design. Unlike the conventional design, temperature-based inferential control is infeasible and compositionbased control structures must be used. For the methyl acetate column, on the other hand, heat integration by altering the feed locations entails no loss in controllability using two-point temperature inferential control.
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