⚙ Choosing the Right Thermodynamic Property Package in Aspen HYSYS
A Technical Guide for Process Engineers
In Aspen HYSYS, choosing the correct thermodynamic property package is critical for accurate simulation, particularly in oil & gas, petrochemical, and chemical processing applications. This isn’t just a formality—your simulation’s reliability depends on it.
🔍 Where It All Begins: Understanding Your System
The nature of your components—polar vs. non-polar—and the operating conditions (e.g., high pressure, near critical point) guide the choice of property package. Use the decision flowchart below to make an informed selection:
📌 Reference Flowchart:

🔧 Why the Choice Matters
Each property package is built on different thermodynamic models:
- PR (Peng-Robinson) – Ideal for hydrocarbon systems at high pressure.
- PRSV – A modified version of PR for better vapor-liquid predictions.
- NRTL & Activity Models – Best for polar, non-ideal, or highly associating mixtures like water-alcohol or acid-base systems.
- Lee-Kesler-Plocker – Great for light hydrocarbon gases like ethylene.
- Steam Package – Specifically designed for water/steam thermodynamics.
📊 Practical Reference Table from Industry
For commonly simulated systems, here’s a table of recommended property packages used by engineers in Aspen HYSYS:
📌 Industrial Property Package Recommendations
| Type of System | Recommended Property Package |
| TEG Dehydration | PR |
| Sour Water | PR, Sour PR |
| Cryogenic Gas Processing | PR, PRSV |
| Air Separation | PR, PRSV |
| Atm Crude Towers | PR, PR Options, GS |
| Vacuum Towers | PR, PR Options, GS (<10 mm Hg), Braun K10, Esso K |
| Ethylene Towers | Lee Kesler Plocker |
| High H₂ Systems | PR, ZJ or GS (see T/P limits) |
| Reservoir Systems | PR, PR Options |
| Steam Systems | Steam Package, CS or GS |
| Hydrate Inhibition | PR |
| Chemical Systems | Activity Models, PRSV |
| HF Alkylation | PRSV, NRTL (Contact Hyprotech) |
| TEG Dehydration with Aromatics | PR (Contact Hyprotech) |
🛠️ Detailed Examples & Recommendations
🔸 Cryogenic Gas Processing
- Use: PRSV
- Why: Better VLE prediction at low temperature & high pressure
- Tip: Always validate phase envelopes to ensure proper condensation of methane/ethane.
🔸 Sour Water Stripper
- Use: Sour PR
- Why: It accounts for ionic dissociation and acid gas solubility
- Note: Works best when combined with proper pH and aqueous specs.
🔸 Atmospheric and Vacuum Crude Distillation
- Use: PR, GS, or Braun K10 for deep vacuum
- Why: GS handles wide boiling range components better.
- Trick: Switch to Esso K for ultra-low-pressure conditions (<10 mmHg).
🔸 Ethylene Production Columns
- Use: Lee-Kesler-Plocker
- Why: Ideal for light gas hydrocarbon systems
- Caution: Do not use PR for ethylene or propylene recovery—errors can be large.
🔸 HF Alkylation
- Use: PRSV + NRTL (with vendor support)
- Why: Strong non-ideality with HF-water-organic mix
- Best Practice: Use data provided by licensor or vendor (Hyprotech).
✅ Quick Engineering Checklist
✔️ Are there polar components (e.g., water, alcohols, acids)?
→ Use activity coefficient models like NRTL or UNIQUAC.
✔️ Is it a hydrocarbon system under pressure?
→ Use Equation of State models like PR or PRSV.
✔️ Are you near the critical region or dealing with light gases?
→ Use Lee-Kesler-Plocker or specialized EOS models.
✔️ For chemical reactors with electrolyte behavior?
→ Use NRTL with Henry’s Law or activity models.
📣 Final Thought
A small mistake in selecting your property package can result in large simulation errors. Use this blog as your engineering-ready reference to build reliable, real-world HYSYS models.