mohtogh:
If you are a degreed ChE, then you must have had to pass at least one conventional plant design course in your university curriculum - and in that course, you would forceably be exposed to what a detailed design is and how it is implemented. However, instead of raising questions, I'll just mention the obvious and normal types of detailed process design that is put into effect in this phase of the design schedule:
1) All hydraulic calculations should be finished and checked with all related specification sheets totally filled in, reviewed, and checked. This pertains to all pipe sizes being identified, all pumps sized, all control valves (& piping valves) identified and sized, all fluid transport equipment sized and identified.
2) All major process equipment and vessels should be sized, specified, reviewed, and checked.
3) All off-sites equipment is sized, specified, reviewed and checked.
4) All raw materials, utilities, energy requirements, and services are identified, specified, reviewed, and checked.
5) All safety devices, such as PSVs, safety interlocks, alarms, and other emergency controls and devices are identified, sized, reviewed, and checked.
6) All environmental impact items such as fugitive emissions, waste streams, treatment facilities, exhausts and flues are identified, sized, reviewed, and checked.
7) All startup and shutdown procedures are drafted and reviewed; checking is on-going as well as revisions - all the way up to the initial start-up.
I could get more specific and go into more details, but the above should suffice to give you a good idea of the magnitude and details involved. Forget about being furnished an isometric drawing for the process or plant involved. I don't know where or who you've gotten that idea from, but I can assure you that after 44 years and countless projects, I was never furnished one - nor did I need one. If you don't know everything about the process you are about to detail when you approach the detail design, then you have no business being on the project team.
There is a lot of preliminary engineering and sizing that takes place prior to the detailed phase and project members should know the Scope Of Work intimately and embark directly on the detailed phase. Project members live, breathe, eat, discuss and dream with the preliminary and final details of the design project. It becomes part of you and your nature. The actual, detailed steps required are unique to each specific project and you should not have, use, or require a "recipe" of steps to do the detailed design. You should plan, outline, and implement the specific design for your specific project.
I hope this experience shows you what you are up against and what you will confront.
Art Montemayor
Spring, TX