Lucidchart is the best process flow diagram software available because it offers extensive features and shapes relevant to every industry trying to map out the process flow for any type of department, campaign, or means of standardization for a company or team. Learn the essentials of process flow diagrams (PFD), including the history, benefits and helpful tips with this guide.
Want to make a process flow diagram of your own? Try Lucidchart. It's quick, easy, and completely free.
A Process Flow Diagram (PFD) is a type of flowchart that illustrates the relationships between major components at an industrial plant. It's most often used in chemical engineering and process engineering, though its concepts are sometimes applied to other processes as well. It’s used to document a process, improve a process or model a new one. Depending on its use and content, it may also be called a Process Flow Chart, Flowsheet, Block Flow Diagram, Schematic Flow Diagram, Macro Flowchart, Top-down Flowchart, Piping and Instrument Diagram, System Flow Diagram or System Diagram. They use a series of symbols and notations to depict a process. The symbols vary in different places, and the diagrams may range from simple, hand-drawn scrawls or sticky notes to professional-looking diagrams with expandable detail, produced with software.
This type of diagram has its roots in the 1920s. In 1921, industrial engineer and efficiency expert Frank Gilbreth, Sr. introduced the “flow process chart” to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). Over the next several decades, the concept spread throughout industrial engineering, manufacturing and even business, in the form of Business Process Diagrams, and information processing, in the form of Data Flow Diagrams and other chart types.
A Process Flow Diagram has multiple purposes:
Want to make a process flow diagram of your own? Try Lucidchart. It's quick, easy, and completely free.
The most common PFD symbols in use today come from agencies such the International Organization for Standardization (ISO 10628 – Flow Diagrams for Process Plants, General Rules), the German Institute for Standardization (DIN) and the American National Standards Institute (ANSI.) However, many companies use their own symbols, which are often similar but vary as they become more detailed.
You can find a comprehensive list of standardized symbols with our PFD symbols guide.
A typical PFD for a single unit process will include these elements:
Typically, these more detailed items are omitted:
When the diagram needs to show
Each block can depict a single piece of equipment or a stage in a process. A rectangle is usually used to show a piece of equipment and labels illustrate function. The process flow is usually shown from left to right, and arrows show flow direction.
On the other hand, a Piping and Instrument Diagram (P&ID) is more technical, describing mechanical details for piping designers, electrical engineers, instrument engineers and other technical experts who need this detail more than they need process details. P&IDs take the conceptual aspects of a PFD and add detail about the equipment, process sequence, process and utility piping, bypass lines, instruments, valves, vents, drains and other items.
With Lucidchart, you have an intuitive platform for creating Process Flow Diagrams. Use our categorized library of symbols to easily build your diagram into a professional presentation. It’s also easy to collaborate with colleagues with our platform, rather than trying to email charts back and forth. Permissions can be set to viewing, commenting or editing, in order to maintain control over the diagramming.
All the diagramming is done in the cloud, requiring no downloads, just an internet connection. Lucidchart works on virtually all operating systems and web browsers. See how easy creating process flow diagrams can be by starting a Lucidchart free trial.
Have you previously used Microsoft Visio for charts? Use our file import tool to bring those legacy diagrams into Lucidchart, where you can view and edit them.
Lucidchart's intuitive drag-and-drop interface makes it easy to create professional process flow diagrams to help improve efficiency within your organization.
Want to make a process flow diagram of your own? Try Lucidchart. It's quick, easy, and completely free.