A plant is initially designed for a certain production capacity, for example 
to produce 5000 tons per hour. The calculated process design that enables a 
specific production capacity gives useful information about physical properties 
(pressure, temperature etc.) on process streams and main equipment. These are 
important process requirements and serves as a base for all installed equipment. 
Process requirements are saved on process stream objects (process data objects) 
and are connected to equipment objects in the facility (pressure vessels, tanks 
etc.) in what we call a process object structure. Connected equipment objects in 
a process stream are then using process design values as input for design values 
during the equipment selection. For example temperature and pressure on the 
process stream object is used as design temperature and design pressure during 
equipment selection of pressure vessels, pipe systems and so on. This enables 
the engineer to select equipment that fulfills the initial process design 
requirements and all equipment will be able to handle the calculated production 
volume without breaking. Easy access to process design information is also 
important during maintenance and operation, especially for environmental and 
safety reasons. Any new installed/replaced equipment must follow the initially 
calculated process design requirements; else it could break and cause 
unnecessary production failures.
This structure could be created in two different ways: