To mbt22
My knowledge so far concerning crude distillation is that using the TBP curve to construct the EFV curve of the whole crude at heater outlet conditions and flash zone is the first step for successful distillation calculations, because it will give the actual % vaporized. Creating EFV is a manual method, but it is the only known method (as far as I know). I presume that the simulators do not have other ways to create the EFV.
Since my only available option is Chemcad, I was informed it doesn't provide EFV curve, but the % vaporized calculated by it should be close to what Watkins calculated since he used the only known method for creating EFV, otherwise the built in method in Chemcad for crude phase change won't be accurate enough.
To dcasto
Thanks, it seems you took a practial step, which software did you use ?
I think you should try the heater outlet conditions at pressure = 30 psia, it will give you slightly lower % vaporized, as the 25 psia is at flash zone and in this case you can't compare your results to the manual results obtained by Watkins since he used stripping steam which will give more vaporization than dry conditions.
In all cases, I think you arrived at about the same results which were obtained by Chemcad, the % vapor you got is much higher (much much higher) than the actual EFV curve results.