A recently published article in Chemical Engineering by Kelly Carmina, P.E. of RCM Thermal Kinetics explores the fundamentals of reactor and vessel design, with a focus on pressure vessels and tanks used throughout the chemical process industries.
While reactors and vessels may appear straightforward at first glance, the article reinforces an important reality for engineers and plant teams: successful vessel design requires far more than selecting a shell thickness or pressure rating. Mechanical integrity, process conditions, material compatibility, heat transfer, hydraulics, safety, and long-term operability are all interconnected.
This review highlights several of the most important concepts from the article and why they matter in real-world plant operation.
Pressure Vessels Are More Than Storage Containers
One of the core themes of the article is that pressure vessels and reactors serve as critical process equipment, not simply passive containers.
Whether the vessel is being used for:
- Chemical reactions
- Mixing and blending
- Heat transfer
- Separation processes
- Surge capacity
- Storage under pressure
its design directly affects process performance, safety, reliability, and maintenance requirements.
The article explains that vessel geometry, internal components, pressure ratings, and material selection must all align with the actual operating environment. Small oversights during design can create operational limitations that persist for years after startup.
For chemical plants, ethanol facilities, and industrial processing operations, this reinforces an important lesson: Mechanical design and process design cannot be separated.

It Is Not Enough to Consider Normal Operating Conditions
A major takeaway from the article is the distinction between normal operating conditions and true design conditions.
Pressure vessels must be engineered to safely withstand:
- Maximum operating pressures
- Temperature excursions
- Startup and shutdown conditions
- Vacuum scenarios
- Upset conditions
- Corrosion allowances
- Cyclic loading and fatigue
The article emphasizes that many failures occur not during steady-state operation, but during transient conditions that were underestimated or overlooked during design.
This is especially important in systems where:
- Steam pressure fluctuates
- Feed compositions vary
- Thermal expansion occurs rapidly
- Fouling changes heat transfer behavior
- Process upsets introduce unexpected vapor generation
Designing reactors and vessels only for “normal” operation can leave facilities vulnerable when real-world conditions inevitably shift.
Reactor and Vessel Design Material Selection Impacts More Than Corrosion Resistance
Another important concept explored in the article is material selection.
While corrosion resistance is often the primary focus, the article highlights that material choice also affects:
- Mechanical strength
- Weldability
- Thermal performance
- Fatigue resistance
- Inspection requirements
- Long-term maintenance costs
Selecting materials for reactor and vessel design without fully understanding the process chemistry or thermal conditions can create expensive operational challenges later.
For example, certain applications may require consideration of:
- Stress corrosion cracking
- Hydrogen embrittlement
- Chloride attack
- Thermal cycling stresses
- Abrasion and erosion
The article reinforces that vessel design is not simply about meeting code requirements. It is about ensuring long-term reliability under real operating conditions.
Code Compliance Is the Starting Point, Not the Finish Line
The article discusses the importance of standards such as the American Society of Mechanical Engineers Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code (BPVC), which establishes requirements for vessel design, fabrication, inspection, and testing.
However, one of the broader engineering lessons is that code compliance alone does not guarantee optimal plant performance.
A vessel may technically satisfy code requirements while still experiencing:
- Poor controllability
- Inadequate heat transfer
- Fouling problems
- Excessive maintenance
- Difficult cleaning access
- Hydraulic instability
- Future capacity limitations
The article highlights the importance of integrating mechanical engineering with process engineering early in project development, rather than treating them as separate disciplines..
Reactor Design Requires Understanding Heat and Mass Transfer
For reactors specifically, the article underscores how heat transfer and mass transfer often determine whether a process succeeds or struggles.
Reaction kinetics alone are not enough.
Engineers must also evaluate:
- Mixing efficiency
- Residence time distribution
- Temperature uniformity
- Vapor disengagement
- Agitation requirements
- Scale-up behavior
- Pressure drop
- Internal circulation patterns
Inadequate understanding of these factors can lead to:
- Reduced conversion efficiency
- Product inconsistency
- Hot spots
- Fouling
- Runaway reactions
- Reduced throughput
The article reinforces a key process engineering principle:
The vessel is part of the process itself, not simply the equipment surrounding it.
Vessel Geometry and Internals Influence Performance
Another valuable point from the article is the importance of vessel geometry and internal design.
Items such as:
- Nozzle placement
- Internal baffles
- Agitator configuration
- Demister pads
- Distributor design
- Vapor disengagement space
- Head configuration
All of these items influence how fluids, vapors, and solids behave inside the vessel.
Poor internal design can create:
- Channeling
- Dead zones
- Excessive entrainment
- Vibration
- Uneven temperature profiles
- Reduced separation efficiency
These issues are often difficult and expensive to correct after installation, which is why early system-level evaluation is so important.
Designing for Operability and Maintenance
The article also highlights an area sometimes underestimated during reactor and vessel design phases: maintainability
Successful vessel design must consider:
- Inspection access
- Cleaning requirements
- Future maintenance
- Instrument accessibility
- Safe operator interaction
- Isolation capability
- Expansion potential
In real facilities, equipment that is difficult to inspect or maintain often becomes a long-term reliability issue, even if the original process design appeared technically sound.
For plant teams, operability should be treated as a core design requirement rather than an afterthought
Integration Improves Long-Term Reliability
One of the broader conclusions reinforced throughout the article is the value of integrated engineering.
The most successful reactor and vessel designs result from close coordination between:
- Process engineering
- Mechanical engineering
- Controls engineering
- Operations teams
- Fabrication specialists
- Maintenance personnel
When these disciplines operate independently, critical assumptions can be missed. When they work together early, facilities are more likely to achieve stable startup, reliable operation, and long equipment life.
Final Thoughts: Good Vessel Design Prevents Future Problems
The reactor and vessel design concepts reviewed in this article demonstrate that pressure vessels and reactors are far more than static pieces of equipment. They are dynamic process assets that directly influence safety, throughput, product quality, energy efficiency, and reliability.
Successful designs require engineers to think beyond minimum code requirements and evaluate how systems will behave under real operating conditions over time.
For facilities planning new installations, process upgrades, or troubleshooting recurring vessel-related issues, early integrated engineering can significantly reduce operational risk and long-term maintenance costs. Talk with our engineers about optimizing reactor and vessel performance for your process application.
Read the original article published by Chemical Engineering here:
Fundamentals of Reactor and Vessel Design: Pressure Vessels & Tanks
