ON DISTILLATION TRAY WEIR LOADINGS
By
                         Michael R. Resetarits & A. Y. Ogundeji
                                 Fractionation Research, Inc.
                                         424 S. Squires St
                                      Stillwater, OK 74074
                                            Paper No. 3a
                                     Distillation Symposium
                                     AIChE Spring Meeting
                                             Tampa, FL
                                           April 28, 2009
Unpublished
Copyright Fractionation Research, Inc.
The AIChE shall not be responsible for statements or opinions contained in its publications
    KEYWORDS
    distillation         trays                    tray hydraulics           outlet weirs
    weir loading         weir loading criteria    picket fence weirs        spray fluidization
    blowing
    ABSTRACT
    Distillation tray liquid rates are usually described via a term known as “weir loading.” A weir
    loading on a tray is simply the volumetric liquid flow rate per unit horizontal length of outlet weir.
    The last 50 years of distillation tray literature proposes to tray designers a very wide, and confusing,
    range of “weir loading criteria.” It is often unclear as to whether the high-end criteria are referring to
    the points at which flooding occurs, or, the points at which the number of flow passes need to be
    increased. There are also low-end criteria which refer to spray fluidization points or points at which
    picket fence weirs need to be used. This paper explains the utility of the weir loading variable and the
    associated literature criteria.
    Impact of Weir Loadings on Tray Hydraulics
        Engineers who design distillation trays always heed outlet weir loadings. The majority of such
    engineers measure weir loadings via the units of “gpm per horizontal inch of outlet weir” or
    “gpm/inch.”
         At low and very low weir loadings, spray fluidization or “blowing” often occurs. In such cases,
    designers often specify picket fence outlet weirs or “weir blocks” to artificially increase weir loads,
    and avoid fluidization, and increase vapor-liquid contact times. Some designers regard 4.0 gpm/inch
    as a low weir loading. Some regard 2.0 gpm/inch as a very low weir loading. The primary focus of
    this article, however, is high rather than low weir loadings.
        At high weir loadings, Figure 1 shows some of the possible deleterious hydraulic results as
    follows:
        1. Large crests and high froth heights and “jet flooding”
        2. Crests that are so large that those crests do not fit into downcomer mouths, and “choke
            flooding” occurs
        3. High froth heights sometimes yield excessive pressure drops, and “downcomer backup
            flooding” occurs
    Some distillation engineers contend that both choking and excessive downcomer back-up both lead to
    excessive froth heights, and so, all floods end up being jet floods.
        Many distillation tray hydraulicists avoid high weir loadings. They employ weir loading criteria
    which they sometimes adhere to strictly. One cure for high weir loadings is increased column
    diameter. More often, multi-pass trays or counterflow trays (e.g. UOP MD or Shell HiFi) are
    selected. Engineers faced with high weir loadings on 1-pass trays, select instead 2-, 3- and 4-pass
    trays. There are very significant disadvantages to multi-pass trays as follows:
                                                                                                            2 
 
        1.   Reduced tray efficiencies
        2.   Increased tray costs (more complicated drawings and more tray parts)
        3.   Increased horizontal ring and vertical bolting bar costs
        4.   Longer tray installation times
    Because of these disadvantages, tray hydraulicists minimize the number of flow passes whenever
    possible - and when their weir loading criteria will allow.
         It should be noted, however, that flow pass minimization is not without peril. Large weir
    loadings and long flow path lengths can lead to large froth height gradients, with larger froth heights
    at tray inlets than outlets. These gradients can yield inlet weeping. They can also yield vapor
    crossflow channeling. Nevertheless, flow pass minimization has appreciable benefits.
    Literature Weir Loading Criteria
         Generally, the Glitsch, Koch, Nutter and Norton tray design manuals (3, 4, 5, 6) have withstood
    the tests of time.
        Particularly, the flooding correlations of those manuals have successfully predicted tray flooding,
    with a reasonable degree of accuracy, for many columns for many years. Those manuals, and other
    references, have offered up weir loading criteria, i.e., weir loading maxima. For example, the Glitsch
    manual (3) first states the following:
                “Usually, a smaller tower diameter can be obtained by using multipass trays to
                hold liquid rates below 8 gpm/wfp.”
    Later, on the same page, the following is stated:
                “If the number of passes is restricted, either by customer preference or by tower
                diameter limitations, liquid rates up to 20 gpm/wfp can be and have been used.”
    Then, in Glitsch Bulletin 674 (7), the following is offered:
                “From a capacity viewpoint, a liquid rate greater than 6 gpm/inch of weir is the
                rate at which a larger number of flow paths should be considered.”
        The Glitsch manual is not the only literature source that seems to be indecisive regarding weir
    loading criteria. Table 1 presents the most easily found of such criteria (3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10). Table 1
    shows that there is no national historical consensus regarding the maximum weir loading at which
    hydraulic malfunctions occur or when additional flow passes should be employed.
    Glitsch Manual Capacity Correlation
        The almost-famous Glitsch Equation 13 (3) is probably the most familiar, and employed, of all of
    the publicly-available means for determining distillation tray flood points. That equation is shown
    below:
                                                                                                           3 
 
    Vapor rate dominates flood calculations, but liquid rate is included in Equation 13 via the GPM term.
        In 2002, Weiland and Resetarits (11) pointed out that Equation 13 can be rearranged algebraically
    to yield the following:
    The above equation reveals that Glitsch Equation 13 includes (inherently) a weir loading term, i.e.,
    weir loading impacts calculated % Flood. This begs the following question: If the Glitsch flood
    correlation already includes a weir loading term, why is a separate and independent weir loading
    criterion required? Indeed, why does anybody require weir loading criteria?
    Nutter Manual Weir Loading Criteria
         Mike Lockett’s book entitled Distillation Tray Fundamentals (12) endorses the weir loading
    criteria of the Nutter manual (5). Those criteria are shown below:
              Tray Spacing (In.)                 Increase Number of Passes if GPM/In. Weir Exceeds
                     12                                                  3
                     15                                                  5
                     18                                                  8
                     21                                                 10
                     24                                                 13
    Those criteria are (possibly) unique in that they contend that a tray’s maximum weir loading should
    depend on tray spacing. This makes perfect sense. Weir loadings affect crest heights and then froth
    heights. Large tray spacings accommodate large weir loadings more easily, and vice versa. But - - - -
    shouldn’t vapor rates also impact maximum operational weir loadings? Is there a single vapor rate
    implied by the Nutter table, or, are the increasing liquid rates of the Nutter table associated with
    increasing liquid rates on a 1–to–1 molar basis?
        Assuming that every weir-loading-tray-spacing pair in the Nutter table is associated with a flood
    point, vapor rates were back-calculated for every weir loading. Two different flood correlations were
    assumed: Glitsch and Nutter. Two different vapor-liquid systems were assumed: depropanization and
    air-water. These calculations revealed that, nearly, but not perfectly, one vapor rate was assumed
    when the Nutter weir loading table was initially generated. It could also easily be inferred that the
    Nutter table was back-calculated from the Nutter flood correlation. If the Nutter weir loading criteria
    were back calculated from the Nutter flood correlation, or from Nutter laboratory flood data, then are
    the Nutter weir loading criteria redundant?
    High Industrial Weir Loadings
         What high weir loadings have been handled successfully industrially? The best single source of
    such information is probably the paper by Resetarits, Schmude and Morehead (10). Table 2 was
    extracted from that paper. Table 2 shows that weir loadings as high as 20 gpm/inch have been
    handled. Generally, the tray spacings of Table 2 are large. By assuming that each line of Table 2
    represents a flood point, a vapor rate was calculated for each line. Those vapor rates are shown in the
    last column. Table 2 now implies that high weir loadings can be handled on distillation trays as long
    as the trays spacings and vapor rates are “appropriate.”
                                                                                                         4 
 
    The Redundancy of Weir Load Criteria
         The primary contention of this paper has been implied several times but has not been specifically
    stated until now: The maximum weir loading at which a distillation tray can function depends upon
    the tray spacing and the vapor rate. Trays can handle very high weir loadings as long as the tray
    spacings are large enough and the vapor rates are low enough. As long as a flood correlation includes
    a weir loading term, either directly or indirectly, weir loading criteria are redundant and misleading.
        Figure 2 was prepared using Glitsch Equation 13. Two different tray spacings were studied.
    Each point on the graph represents 100% of Calculated Flood. At higher vapor rates, lesser weir
    loadings are attainable. At smaller tray spacings, lesser weir loadings are attainable. Figure 3 was
    also derived using Glitsch Equation 13. Again, each point represents 100% of Calculated Flood. At
    higher tray spacings, higher weir loadings are attainable.
    Public FRI(SM) Data
        Fractionation Research, Inc. (FRI) is a non-profit company that performs distillation research,
    especially on trays and packings, for its 70 member companies. FRI data that are more than 30 years
    old are usually released to the public via the Oklahoma State University (OSU) library. Those public
    data provide additional information regarding weir loading criteria.
        Figure 4 was taken from FRI Topical Report 10 (13). This graph provides raw capacity data from
    valve trays from FRI’s 4-foot diameter test column. Figure 4 shows the following:
        1. Different physical systems have different capacities
        2. At higher vapor rates, weir loading capacities are lower
    Experienced tray designers are very familiar with such trends.
         Table 3 summarizes capacity/flood data that were collected from five sets of sieve and valve trays
    (13, 14, 15, 16, 17). All of those data were collected at 24 inch tray spacings. The table shows the
    maximum weir loadings that were studied using those trays. To achieve each of those weir loadings,
    the vapor rates needed to be sufficiently low – as shown in the table. Higher weir loadings would
    have been attainable – at lower vapor rates or at larger tray spacings. FRI has appreciable film and
    video footage showing trays functioning at high weir loadings, including weir loadings in excess of
    literature design criteria.
        A careful side study of Table 3 shows that swept-back weirs seemingly have a maximum capacity
    benefit of “only” about 10%. Straight, chordal weirs certainly create bottlenecks near their ends
    where there is little horizontal area for froths to deaerate and enter downcomers. Although swept-
    back weirs make sense, the resultant lost bubbling area is significant. Table 3 does not provide a
    strong endorsement for swept-back weirs, but such weirs are a valuable tool that should not be
    removed from tray designers’ toolboxes.
        Most importantly, Table 3 shows that at least five sets of conventional trays have been run at FRI
    at very high weir loadings.
                                                                                                         5 
 
    Summary
         Several literature criteria are available that provide and promote maximum tray weir loadings.
    Trays have been operated industrially, and in commercial-sized pilot plants, at weir loadings in excess
    of the literature criteria.
    Conclusion
        Distillation trays can be designed for very large weir loadings, as long as the tray spacings are
    large enough and the vapor rates are low enough. A reliable flood correlation (or applicable field
    data) minimizes the utility of maximum weir loading criteria. Such criteria will never go away,
    however, especially because high weir loadings can sometimes lead to vapor crossflow channeling
    and inlet weeping.
    Acknowledgement
        The authors thank the staff of Process Consulting Services, and especially Mr. Scott Golden and
    Mr. Tony Barletta, whose comments initiated this study of weir loading criteria.
       The authors also thank the past and future staffs of FRI for the many hours of difficult work that
    went into every single distillation data points.
    Nomenclature
    AA           Bubbling area, ft2
    CAF          Capacity factor of Ballast trays after correcting for foaming (Graph of Reference 3)
    Cb           Capacity factor         , based on tray bubbling area, ft/s
    CFS          Vapor rate, actual ft3/s
    Vload        Vapor load, CFS                        , ft3/s
    ρL           Liquid density, lb/ft3
    ρV           Vapor density, lb/ft3
    FPL          Flow path length, inch
    GPM          Liquid rate, U.S. gallons per minute
    wl           Weir loading, U.S. gpm/inch
    wfp          Width of tray flow path, inch
                                                                                                         6 
 
    Bibliography
    1. Kister, H. .Z., Larson, Kirk F. and Madsen, Poul E., “Vapor Cross-flow Channeling on Sieve
       Trays: Fact or Myth?”, Chemical Engineering Progress, p. 86-93, November 1992.
    2. Resetarits, M.R. and Pappademos, N., “Factors Influencing Vapor Crossflow Channeling”,
       AIChE Annual Meeting, Reno, NV, November 8, 2001.
    3. Glitsch, Inc., Ballast Tray Design Manual Bulletin No. 4900-Fourth edition, Dallas, TX,
        February 1984, pp 13 and 33
    4. Flexitray Valve Tray Design Manual, bulletin 960-1, Koch Engineering Company Inc.,
        Wichita, KS, 1982, p 8
    5. Nutter Engineering, Nutter Float Valve Design Manual, Rev. 1, Aug 1981, pp 10
    6. Norton Chemical Process Products Corporation, Valve Tray Design Manual, 1996, pp 4
        and 6.
    7. Glitsch, Inc., “17 Critical questions and Answers About Trays, Column Internals and
        Accessories”, Bulletin 674, 1986. P 1.
    8. Kister,Henry Z., Distillation Design, McGraw-Hill, NY, NY, ISBN 0-07-034909-6, 1992,
        pp 288 – 294, 340.
    9. Kister, Henry Z., Distillation Operation, McGraw-Hill, NY,NY, ISBN 0-07-034910-X,
        1990, pp167 – 169 and 175 – 177.
    10. Resetarits, M.R., Schmude, D.J. and Morehead, P.W., “Designing Crossflow Trays for
        High Weir Loadings,” AIChE Spring Annual Meeting, New Orleans, La., March 10-14,
        2002.
    11. Weiland, R.H. and Resetarits, M. R., “New Uses for Old Distillation Equations,” AIChE
        Spring Meeting, New Orleans, La., March 11-14, 2002.
    12. Lockett, Michael J., Distillation Tray Fundamentals, Cambridge University Press, New
        York, NY,1986.
    13. Keller, G.J., Richards, K.J. and Winn, F.W., “Koch Flexitray”, FRI Topical Report 10,
        August 1956.
    14. Keller, G.J., Winn, F.W. and Yanagi, T., “Glitsch Ballast Tray”, FRI Topical Report 15,
        September 1958.
    15. Keller, G.J. and Yanagi, T., “Glitsch Ballast Tray, Type VI”, FRI Topical Report 19,
        October 1959.
    16. Yanagi, T. and Keller, G.J., “Nutter Type B Float Valve Trays”, FRI Topical Report 31,
        July 1964.
    17. Yanagi, T., “Glitsch V-O Ballast Tray”, FRI Topical Report 41, December 1967.
                                                                                                    7 
 
Figure 1: Tray Flooding Mechanisms
Jet Flood                            Choke Flood
Back-Up Flood
                                                   8 
 
            Figure 2: Glitsch Equation 13 Flood Calculations
    Figure 3 : Glitsch Equation 13 Flood Calculations (Cb =0.200 ft/s)
                                                                         9 
 
    Figure 4 : FRI Valve Tray Capacity Data (Topical Report 10)
                                                                  10 
 
             Table 1
                                           Literature Weir Loading Criteria
                                                      gpm/inch
                  Reference               First Quote           Second Quote                 Third Quote
                       3                        8                       20
                       7                        6
                       6                        10                      13.5                    10 - 15
                       4                  10.4 – 11.7
                       8                    7 – 13
                       9                    7 – 13                    10 – 13                     20
                       10                       25                      18.8                      20
             Table 2
                                             Industrial Design Points
     Application              Tray Type       Tower          No. of     Tray Spacing,   Weir Load,           Cb @
                                             Diam., ft       Passes        inches       gpm/inch          flood, ft/s
Product Stripper            Conv. Valve     9            2              27              19.17             0.228
Deethanizer                 SUPERFRAC       5            1              24              14.25             0.275
Crude Twr – PA              Bi-FRAC         25.5         2              30              15.92             0.271
Crude Twr – PA              SUPERFRAC       14.3         2              36              18.17             0.264
VGO Stripper                Sieve           9.8          2              29.5            19.58             0.232
Stabilizer                  SUPERFRAC       10           2              24              17.58             0.234
Deethanizer                 Sieve           7.5          2              24              14.5              0.265
Debutanizer                 SUPERFRAC       5.6          2              24              13.08             0.280
FCC Main Frac – PA          Bi-FRAC         24           2              36              20                0.246
C3 Splitter                 NYE             11.5         2              18              12.08             0.250
Stripper                    Conv. Valve     10           2              24              18.75             0.222
FCC Debutanizer             SUPERFRAC       9.5          2              24              18.17             0.228
Crude Twr – Stripper        Sieve           16           2              24              13.83             0.272
                                                                                                             11 
      
     Table 3
                  FRI Valve Tray Capacity Data – Maximum Weir Loadings
     FRI       System      Pressure       Tray     Weir Type     Maximum      Cb
    Topical                 (psia)      Spacings                Weir Load    (ft/s)
    Report                              (inches)                (gpm/Inch)
      10       iC4-nC4       165          24         Swept         12.52     0.172
                                                     Back
      10       C6/C7         24           24         Swept         10.42     0.297
                                                     Back
      10       C6/C7         4.5          24         Swept         7.02      0.311
                                                     Back
      15       C6/C7         24           24         Swept         10.5      0.326
                                                     Back
      15       C6/C7         4.5          24         Swept          9.1      0.356
                                                     Back
      15       C6/C7         50           24         Swept         10.6      0.270
                                                     Back
      15       iC4-nC4       165          24         Swept         12.5      0.179
                                                     Back
      19       C6/C7         24           24         Straight      14.6      0.284
      19       C6/C7         4.5          24         Straight      12.6      0.357
      19       iC4-nC4       165          24         Straight      17.7      0.178
      31       iC4-nC4       165          24         Swept         13.04     0.233
                                                     Back
      31       C6/C7         24           24         Swept         10.20     0.350
                                                     Back
      41       C6/C7         24           24         Straight      14.46     0.319
      41       iC4-nC4       165          24         Straight      17.54     0.174
                                                                                      12 
 
                           WEIR LOADINGS IN DIFFERENT UNITS
                 GPM/FT               GPM/INCH             CFS/FT    M3/HR/M
                   22.4                    1.87             0.0500    16.7
                   24.0                    2.00             0.0535    17.9
                   36.0                    3.00             0.0802    26.8
                   48.0                    4.00              0.107    35.8
                   50.0                    4.17              0.111    37.3
                   72.0                    6.00              0.160    53.7
                   84.0                    7.00              0.187    62.6
                   96.0                    8.00              0.214    71.5
                   100                     8.33              0.223    74.5
                   112                     9.35              0.250    83.6
                   120                     10.0              0.267    89.4
                   150                     12.5              0.334     112
                   156                     13.0              0.348     116
                   200                     16.7              0.446     149
                   240                     20.0              0.535     179
                   250                     20.8              0.557     186
                   300                     25.0              0.668     224
Notes:
    1.   CFS/FT * 448.8 = GPM/FT
    2.   CFS/FT * 334.46 = M3/HR/M
    3.   Linde range: 0.05 to 0.25 CFS/FT
    4.   Good guideline for fluidization is 2.0 gpm/inch
    5.   TR138 If statement kicks in at 4.0 gpm/inch at TS=24in
                                                                               13