The future competitiveness of the European chemical industry depends on its ability to deliver high quality and high value products at competitive prices in a sustainable fashion, and to adapt quickly to changing customer needs. The use of flexible intensified continuous processes is a promising strategy towards this goal. Compared to traditional batch processes, intensified continuous production gives access to new and difficult to produce chemical compounds, leads to better product uniformity and reduces the consumption of raw materials and energy drastically. Flexible (modular) chemical plants can produce different products using the same equipment with short down-times between the campaigns, and enable companies to bring new products to the market quickly. As an analysis within the former project F³ Factory has shown, full automation is a prerequisite to realize the benefits of intensified small and medium scale continuous plants. In traditional batch production mode which is widely used in the specialties sector, a batch can be put on hold to take samples and analyse them in the lab and then to decide on corrective measures. In contrast, continuous flow processes necessitate automated real-time measurements and tight closed-loop control of the product quality. If these are not available, there is a huge risk of producing large amounts of off-spec product. These would then require rework or even must be treated as waste, thus causing high cost and high consumption of energy and of raw materials. Therefore, the main goal of the CONSENS project is to advance the continuous production of high-value products that meet high quality demands in flexible intensified continuous plants by introducing novel online sensing equipment and closed-loop control of the key product parameters.
All goals of CONSENS were achieved, and very promising technologies were developed which will provide an impact on the European chemical industries by
1. making processes resilient to variances in feed-stocks and to external disturbances,
2. enabling the migration of batch processes to flexible continuous intensified processes, and
3. enhancing fast development of new products.
CONSENS focused on flexible continuous plants but the results are transferable to other kind of plants.