Emerson’s AMS® Suite Enables Solvay to Increase Maintenance Productivity by up to 15 per cent

Published: 25th September 2009 | Issue 9 Share article:

PlantWeb® digital plant architecture supports intelligent device commissioning and diagnostics for enhanced reliability

Solvay’s plant in Tavaux, France has applied technology supplied by Emerson Process Management to bring about maintenance department productivity gains of between 10 and 15 per cent. The Tavaux plant, the largest chemical plant in the Solvay group, has installed Emerson’s AMS® Suite predictive maintenance software to better manage field devices.

As the total number of devices at the plant increased to 15,000, with over 20 per cent of these being complex instruments, plant staff looked for ways to capitalise on diagnostics to empower better business decisions. AMS Suite: Intelligent Device Manager, together with Emerson’s DeltaVTM digital automation system, present real-time plant floor information to workers across the enterprise to improve reliability by identifying potential plant upsets before they occur.

Emerson’s AMS Suite enabled Solvay to create a complete database of device information in less than one day. It has also enabled the number of sophisticated and powerful instruments and valves being managed on site to be increased significantly, without increasing staffing levels. Maintenance staff now use AMS Suite to manage the calibration of devices, and document and trend the calibration information.

"During the start up of the EPICEROL production unit, the process to produce Epichlorohydrin from glycerine, Emerson’s AMS Device Manager ensured the complete automation system, including DeltaV were configured right the first time allowing us to save valuable time during setup," said Giacomo D’Andrea, Service Manager, Automation/Instrumentation and Electricity, Solvay. "AMS Suite is of great value when commissioning and it is also our daily tool for identifying, standardising, configuring instruments, and saving reference values."

A critical part of the plant is the chlorine service and Solvay is using Emerson’s AMS ValveLink®, a SNAP-ONTM application to AMS Device Manager, to monitor the control valves. These valves are fitted with Fisher® FIELDVUE® DVC6000 digital valve controllers, which enable a "partial stroke test" to be performed every month, without shutting the plant down or bypassing the valve. Partial stroke testing enables higher reliability of the valve and reduces manpower required for full testing. This procedure has already successfully detected an anomaly on a valve that is critical for the unit allowing plant personnel to fix the issue before there were any plant upsets.

For more information, visit www.Emerson.com

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