Method of producing a clean gas from a hydrocarbon
Field of the invention
The invention relates to a method of producing a clean gas in a reaction zone by mixing hot air and steam with carbonaceous residue, adding hydrocarbon to release moisture'and volatile and to have reacted volatile and carbon to CO and H2.
Discussion of Background
The production of fuel gas from hydrocarbon like coal is operated at the present time by injecting cold reactants and/or steam into a gasifier and transferring a major portion of the sensible heat in the gasification products to a water/steam mixture. This is necessary to enable reliable operation of downstream gas cleaning equipment. Consequently the conversion of coal to the product gas in terms of the energy content is not maximized.
Summary of the invention
Accordingly, one object of the invention is to provide a novel method and plant which maximizes the production of clean "reduced" gas from the feed hydrocarbon with minimal transfer of heat out of the involved system.
This is achieved, according to the invention, by means of the features of patent claims 1 and 10.
The advantages of the invention are to be seen, inter alia, in a considerable reduction of the plant and operating costs, due to a very high calorific value conversion and in the elimination of indirect contact heat exchangers.
Brief description of the invention
A more complete appreciation of the invention and many of the attendant advantages thereof will be readily obtained as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawing, which illustrates diagrammatically an exemplary embodiment of the invention with coal as hydrocarbon. Only the elements essential for understanding the invention are shown. Arrows illustrate the flow direction of the working media.
Description of the preferred embodiment
Referring now to the drawing, the equipment necessary for performing the gas production consists mainly of three blocks, namely a gasifying device 3, a gas/solid heat exchanger 4 and an combined ash cooler/oxidizer 1 , 2.
Via a fan 16 ambient air is introduced in the ash cooler 1. In order to increase the amount of oxygen atoms and in the same time reduce the amount of air, water is also introduced into the cooler at its cold end via water supply 10. This water is evaporated in the air stream during its travel through the cooling device. This device may be a gas/solid heat exchanger of the grid type or of the fluid bed type. The air is heated up to about 500-900°C. The lower value is chosen, if it is intended to have a catalytic reaction further downstream. The solids entering the cooler 1 at its hot side consist mainly of inert ash, carbon and of CaS and CaO.
They have an inlet temperature of about 600°C and leave the cooler with a temperature of about 100°C. The size of the solids is at least approximately 500 μm which avoids particles being entrained with the air leaving the cooler at its hot end. By entering the apparatus 1 , in an oxidizing sector 2 the unbumed carbon and CaS particles are first oxidized by the hot air/steam mixture into C02 and CaS04. Other components of the hot material, i.e. unoxidized gases like CO, H2S and COS as well as sulphided sorbents like CaS and FeS are also oxidized in this area. It might be that the unbumed carbon and CaS particles are also oxidized by the hot air/steam mixture into CaO and S02. In order to avoid that significant amount of S02 penetrates in the following reactor, it is appropriate to arrange the heat exchanger surfaces and to have the air/steam mixture circulated in the sector 2 so as to obtain as a last process in the oxidizer always mainly CaS04.
From this oxidizing area 2, which is the hot side of the ash cooler 1 , the air/steam mixture enters a reactor 3 via a hot air supply 21. Depending on the apparatus type, the mixture can be introduced into the reactor on different levels. In the example shown on the drawing, in which the reactor is an upright gasifier with a flow stream from bottom to top, the mixture is introduced at the bottom. The reactor is provided with two other inlets. One carbonaceous residue supply line 20 and one common inlet for coal 7 and sulfur sorbent 8.
In the present example the carbonaceous residue is char which is partially gasified coal. It enters the reactor 3 with a temperature of about 700°C. It reacts with the oxygen of the air/steam mixture to form C02/CO and releases heat.
Downstream of the char inlet, the coal to be gasified is introduced into the reactor 3. This coal can be either crushed or pulverized. Like the air, coal may be injected on different levels of the reactor. The same inlet is preferably used to introduce sulfur sorbent, which can be pulverized limestone or dolomite. Coal and sorbent may be transported by any suitable means, i.e. by steam; in a pre-
ferred embodiment, the produced reduced gas itself transports the solids. If the coal is in form of crushed material with a size of approximately 6 mm, it can be fed by gravity. The adding of coal in the reactor results in a moisture and volatile release. A reaction of volatile and carbon occurs with the steam, the C02 and remaining 02 (if any) to form CO and H2.
Thus at the exit of the reactor 3 there is mainly CO and H2 to be found together with N2 from the air and trace amounts of C02 and H20 in vapor form. Also present are char and ash. The temperature at the exit of the reactor is in the range of 400-700°C, again depending on the entry temperature of the air due to any possible catalytic treatment downstream.
If limestone is used as a sulfur sorbent in the reactor, CaC03 is converted into CaO. The sulfur in the coal is converted mainly into H2S and in trace quantities into COS. Most of the H2S and COS react with CaO to form solid CaS. Thus at the exit of the reactor, the calcium sorbent is present as CaS and CaO.
Downstream the reactor a particulate separation device 11 is provided. This separator could be a cyclone designed to separate the predominant char from the remaining components. Since the size of the ash is typically smaller than 30μm it will escape the cyclone, while the char, which is greater than 100μm, will be retained in the cyclone. This separated char is returned via the supply line 20 into the reactor, while the remaining components, especially the reduced gas is forwarded to a gas cooler 4.
The reduced gas is supposed to leave the gas cooler 4 with a temperature of about 200°C. Downstream the gas cooler a solids filter 5 is provided in the line 14 to remove from the gas fine ash and char, as well as CaS and CaO that has not been separated in the gas cooler 4. This filter is supposed to remove all the remaining solids from the gas.
A further fan 17 is installed in the gas line 14, preferably on the clean side of the filter 5. Its purpose is to control the pressure in the system close to atmospheric conditions.
Depending on the utilization of the gas, a further gas cooler 18 may be provided in the gas line 14 downstream the fan 17, if a wet electrostatic participator has not been used upstream as a filtering element. To cool the gas down to 30°C, it is recommended to use a water spray cooler.
The filter 5 could be a fabric filter, an electrostatic participator or a wet electrostatic participator. The use of the latter provides following advantages: beside the particulate removal a further cooling of the gas, the removal of ammonia, tar and hydrogen cyanide that might have been produced in the reactor 3.
The further treatment of the solids removed from the filter 5 is a major feature of the present invention.
The gas cooler 4 is a gas/solids heat exchanger and might be constituted of a series of cyclones. Therein solids and gas flow in a predominating counter- current manner. The minor part of cold solids fed into the gas cooler is taken from the exit of the filter 5 via feed line 22. As the size of the solids exiting the filter is smaller than 50μm, they have to be size-enlarged in order to enable retention within the cyclones. This agglomeration occurs in a pelletizer 6, in which pellets having a size of approximately 1-5 mm are produced. The solids are introduced in the gas cooler 4, in which they are heated up to about 600°C. At the exit of the gas cooler, they are fed into the ash cooler 1 via the heated solids line 15a.
In a preferred embodiment, the major part of cold solids to be fed into the gas cooler are solids exiting the ash cooler 1 being recycled unchanged into the gas
cooler 4 via 13. This means that only the solids exiting the filter 5 have to be pelletized. This is based on the fact, that the size of the solids being cooled down in the ash cooler 1 is great enough to be retained in the gas cooler 4 while flowing through the series of cyclones. As shown in the drawing, accordingly both solids from filter 5 and from ash cooler 1 are separately introduced in the gas cooler. Moreover they each cross the gas cooler in a separate path being each heated up therein to about 600°C. The separate paths are maintained as a heated solids line 15, 15a throughout the further flow of this solids.
Due to the permanent adding of coal and sulfur solvent during operation, an equivalent amount of solids has to be removed from the system. This occurs preferably in a disposal line 19 connected to the exit of the ash cooler 1.
As described below in an example, the amount of the solids exiting the filter 5 and flowing through line 15a corresponds approximately to the amount of material to be disposed. Accordingly it is preferable to also keep separated by a partition this solids from the main solids flow in line 15 within its travel through the ash cooler 1 and to dispose it via the line 19.
The invention may be illustrated in more detail with reference to a numerical example: it goes without saying that absolute values cannot be specified in connection with the said numerical values with regard to the dimensioning of the involved apparatus and in particular the reactor and the gas cooler, since absolute values are in any case not meaningful enough on account of their dependence on all too numerous parameters. The sole determining factor for the design is that minimal transfer of heat out of the involved system is realized.
The amount of injected coal via line 7 be 19.5 kg/sec, the coal having a lower heating value of about 25 MJ/Kg and containing about 2.5 kg H20. The amount of injected sulfur sorbent, i.e. limestone via line 8 be 3 kg/sec. Via a fan 16, about 45 kg/sec of air are sucked in the system. Water in the amount of 5 kg/sec
is added at the cold side of the ash cooler via water supply 10. All these components are introduced under ambient conditions.
The amount of circulated inert solids through the gas cooler 4 and the ash cooler 1 via path 13, 15 is about 75 kg/sec. The amount of solids captured at the exit of filter 5, pelletized and transported through the gas cooler and the ash cooler in an own path 15a and disposed via the line 19 is about 5.5 kg/sec. It is assumed that 0.5 kg/sec of this solids are burned out during oxidation in the ash cooler and flow as a gas into the reactor 3, thus remaining in the cycle.
As a result the reduced product gas downstream the fan 17 is at an amount of about 67.5 kg/sec, the gas having a heat value of 6.7 MJ/kg. A small amount of the product gas is kept in the system as a transportation means for the pulverized coal and sorbent.
Instead of introducing the whole amount of hydrocarbon into the reactor, in a first variant of the invention, a small amount of the hydrocarbon, i.e. coal might be injected in a burner located in the ash cooler. This feature allows a temperature control within the ash cooler.
In a second variant, the sorbent, i.e. limestone or dolomite might be injected into the ash cooler instead into the reactor 3. If this sorbent is pulverized, the size must be fine enough to be entrained by the air stream. Again CaC03 is converted into CaO; a small portion of unreacted CaO forms CaS04 with S02 in the ash cooler. This feature allows calcining the sorbent and providing a longer residence time for CaO inside the downstream reactor 3, which improves the sulfur capture.
In a further variant, the air/steam mixture as well as the coal might be introduced into the reactor at several different locations, which allows a better temperature control inside the reactor and a still higher conversion efficiency.
Of course, the invention is not restricted to the plant shown and described. The invention can be used irrespective of the type and design of the reactor. This reactor could be as well an apparatus with entrained flow, if a pulverized fuel is used or with fluidized bed, if crushed fuel is used. Instead of cyclones, separating apparatus with moving bed could be used as well.
Obviously, numerous modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein.
LIST OF DESIGNATIONS
1 air heater (gas/solid heat exchanger)
2 Oxidizer
3 Gasifier
4 reduced gas cooler
5 solid filter
6 pelletizer
7 coal feed line
8 sulfur sorbent line
9 air supply
10 water supply
11 particulate separation device, cyclone
12 hot gas line
13 cold solids line
14 cold gas line
15 heated solids line
16 pushing fan
17 pulling fan
18 gas cooler
19 removal of ash
20 carbonaceous residue supply line
21 hot air supply to 3
22 feed line from 5 to 4