GB1561635A - Catalyst and chemicalprocesses such as carbon monoxide shift - Google Patents

Catalyst and chemicalprocesses such as carbon monoxide shift Download PDF

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Publication number
GB1561635A
GB1561635A GB45758/75A GB4575875A GB1561635A GB 1561635 A GB1561635 A GB 1561635A GB 45758/75 A GB45758/75 A GB 45758/75A GB 4575875 A GB4575875 A GB 4575875A GB 1561635 A GB1561635 A GB 1561635A
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catalyst
reduction
steam
hydrogen
stage
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Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd
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Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd
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Priority to GB45758/75A priority Critical patent/GB1561635A/en
Priority to DE19762650443 priority patent/DE2650443A1/en
Priority to JP51132705A priority patent/JPS5263193A/en
Publication of GB1561635A publication Critical patent/GB1561635A/en
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J23/00Catalysts comprising metals or metal oxides or hydroxides, not provided for in group B01J21/00
    • B01J23/70Catalysts comprising metals or metal oxides or hydroxides, not provided for in group B01J21/00 of the iron group metals or copper
    • B01J23/72Copper
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01JCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROCESSES, e.g. CATALYSIS OR COLLOID CHEMISTRY; THEIR RELEVANT APPARATUS
    • B01J37/00Processes, in general, for preparing catalysts; Processes, in general, for activation of catalysts
    • B01J37/16Reducing
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02PCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
    • Y02P20/00Technologies relating to chemical industry
    • Y02P20/50Improvements relating to the production of bulk chemicals
    • Y02P20/52Improvements relating to the production of bulk chemicals using catalysts, e.g. selective catalysts

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Catalysts (AREA)
  • Organic Low-Molecular-Weight Compounds And Preparation Thereof (AREA)
  • Low-Molecular Organic Synthesis Reactions Using Catalysts (AREA)
  • Treating Waste Gases (AREA)
  • Solid-Sorbent Or Filter-Aiding Compositions (AREA)

Description

(54) CATALYST AND CHEMICAL PROCESSES SUCH AS CARBON MONOXIDE SHIFT (71) We, IMPERIAL CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES LIMITED, Imperial Chemical House, Millbank, London SW1P 3JF, a British Company do hereby declare the invention, for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement: This invention relates to catalysts and in particular to a method of making a catalyst containing active metallic copper.
Catalysts containing active metallic copper have come into widespread use for processes such as low temperature carbon monoxide shift, methanol synthesis and minor uses such as hydrogenations, oxygen absorption and sulphur absorption. It has been known since the late 1920s that when such metallic copper catalysts are made by reducing a corresponding copper oxide composition, the reduction must be carried out with great care, otherwise the catalyst has low activity. The reduction procedure that has become most common involves passing hydrogen strongly diluted (for example down to 0.2% v/v H2) with a dry non-reactive gas such as nitrogen or natural gas over the oxide composition and very cautiously increasing the temperature (to finally 250"C) and the hydrogen proportion (to finally 5-10% v/v). When steam has been used as the diluent, the activity of the catalyst has been observed to be less than when using dry gas, and therefore steam is not used if a dry diluent is available.
We have now found that steam can be used as the diluent provided that reduction with hydogen and steam is followed by treatment with a more strongly reducing gaseous medium.
According to the invention a method of making a catalyst containing active metallic copper from a corresponding catalyst precursor containing copper oxide comprises treating the precursor in a first reducing stage at not over 275"C with a reducing gas mixture containing at least 50% v/v of steam and/or carbon dioxide until substantially complete reduction of the copper oxide to metallic copper has apparently taken place and thereafter treating it at not over 2750C with a reducing gas mixture containing under 25% v/v of steam and/or carbon dioxide.
The catalyst precursor usually contains in addition to copper oxide one or more oxides that are not or substantially not reducible by hydrogen at atmospheric pressure. Among these oxides are alumina, chromia and zinc oxide and mixtures thereof in catalysts in common use. The copper oxide CuO content of such catalysts is typically in the range 10-75% by weight. Especially important catalyst precursors to which the invention is applicable include zinc oxide, particularly those in which the ZnO/CuO molar ratio is between 0.5 and 3, without or with other non-reducible oxides; or chromium oxide, for example in so-called copper chromite, in which the molar ratio of CuO to Cr2O3 is between 0.5 and 2.5. The invention is particularly applicable to ternary catalyst precursors such as copper oxide/zinc oxide/alumina in which the alumina content is up to 55% by weight, especially in the range 2.5 to 20% by weight, copper oxide/zinc oxide/chromium oxide in which the chromum oxide content is in the range 2.5 to 30% by weight as Cr2O3, and analogous catalysts containing both alumina and chromium oxide. Catalyst precursors containing, in addition to copper oxide and preferably zinc oxide, the oxides of boron, silver, vanadium, rare earth metals, uranium, or manganese, singly or in combinations with each other or with aluminium and/or chromium, can equally well be reduced by the method of the invention.
The reducing gases that may be used include hydrogen and carbon monoxide and compounds that react readily to give hydrogen and/or carbon oxides, such as methanol, dimethyl ether, methyl formate and ammonia. When hereinafter reference is made to "equivalent hydrogen", this means the quantity of hydrogen produced by reacting such compounds completely with steam or completely decomposing them. Mixtures containing such gases may be used, for example methanol synthesis gas or purge gas, ammonia synthesis gas or purge gas, or hydrogen-containing town gas. The non-reactive gases such as nitrogen, methane and noble gases present in such mixtures do not interfere, but some mixtures containing unsaturated hydrocarbons are to be avoided owing to the risk of carbon formation over the catalyst. Naturally they should be free of catalyst poisons. Temperature control precautions should be taken when for example there is an accompanying exothermic or endothermic reaction of the gaseous components.
The reduction in the presence of steam and/or carbon dioxide should be carried out with precautions to avoid over-heating the catalyst as a result of the strongly exothermic copper oxide reduction reaction. The temperature should not be allowed to exceed 275"C at any point in the catalyst bed. How this is done depends on what type of reactor is to be used. If it is equipped with tubes containing coolant or if the catalyst is in tubes surrounded by coolant the content of reducing gas can be high, for example over 10% v/v, and in the most favourable conditions of cooling there is less gained by using the method of the invention.
In the much more usual situation of an uncooled catalyst bed, the proportion of reducing gas should be controlled such that the heat of reduction is absorbed by the diluent gas without increasing this temperature above 275"C. The catalyst bed is preferably equipped with several internal thermometric points. Typically the content of reducing gas, calculated as equivalent hydrogen, is under 3% v/v, most commonly under about 1% and possibly 0.5% v/v, at the start of reduction. The catalyst precursor is first heated dry, for example by hot air, to above the dew point of the steam. Then steam-diluted reducing gas is fed and the temperature gradually increased until reduction begins. Reduction usually begins at between 150 and 1700C, but may begin at a lower temperature or possibly up to about 220"C, and will be evident from an increase in temperature in the bed. During reduction the reducing gas supply may be decreased or stopped in order to prevent an excessive rise in temperature, but normally will be maintained or gradually increased to 3 - 10% v/v as reduction proceeds. A hot spot will gradually pass through the catalyst bed. When it reaches the outlet, this first stage of reduction is complete. Alternatively or additionally the progress of reduction can be monitored by analysing the gas mixture leaving the bed for the presence of unconsumed reducing gas or for the gaseous products of the reduction.
The space velocity for the first stage is suitably in the range 200 - 10000 hours. The pressure is conveniently atmospheric but can be up to the pressure at which steam condenses at the temperature of operation. A suitable range is thus 1 - 50 atm. abs.
The product of the reduction in the presence of at least 50% v/v of steam and/or carbon dioxide can now be treated with a reducing gas without precautions to avoid overheating, provided the temperature is controlled at not over 275"C and provided the first stage reduction has been sufficiently complete. The reducing gas can be used undiluted or with the minor degree of dilution typical of available gases such as ammonia synthesis gas (N2+3H2) provided the first reduction stage has been sufficiently complete. If desired an intermediate reduction using reducing gas with an added diluent other than steam and/or carbon dioxide can be used, for example when such a diluent is available in small quantities, whereafter full-strength reducing gas is used to finish the reduction.
The stages of reduction are most conveniently carried out by the user of the catalyst in the reactor in which the catalyst is to be used. If desired, however, the first stage can be carried out by the catalyst manufacturer and followed by stages of cooling and drying and, if necessary, (depending on how far reduction has proceeded) stabilisation by means of dilute oxygen (for example 0.2% v/v initially, rising to 5%, at a temperature kept at under 70"C), by which the metallic copper is superficially oxidised. The product of such a procedure is a so-called "pre-reduced" catalyst, which can be transported to the user's reactor and reduced in a short time with reducing gas at any strength. In order to obtain the advantages of the invention the user should employ reducing gas substantially free of steam and/or carbon dioxide. Alternatively the stabilisation procedure may be applied to catalyst after all the stages of reduction.
The cooled, dried and possibly stabilised product of the reduction in the presence of steam and/or carbon dioxide is believed to be a new composition of matter.
The gaseous medium used in the second stage of reduction should contain, if any steam and carbon dioxide, less than will be present in the process gas. Thus when the catalyst is to be used in a shift process, the content of steam and carbon dioxide is normally less than 25% by volume in the second stage gas and preferably it is less than 5% by volume. We believe that the advantage resulting from the use of the method of the invention is due to ensuring that the catalyst before use is subjected to an atmosphere more strongly reducing than that which will prevail during use in a shift process. Possibly there is some reduction of other oxides present, especially of zinc oxide. The invention is not, however, limited to any particular chemical mechanism.
The space velocity of the second stage is suitably in the range 200-10000 hours. The pressure is conveniently atmospheric but can, if desired, be higher than in the first stage owing to the lower partial pressure of steam and the generally higher temperature.
The invention includes chemical processes, especially a low-temperature (under 300"C, especially 190 - 270"C) carbon monoxide shift process, in which the catalyst precursor has been reduced at start-up by the method of the invention. Such a shift process, in which carbon monoxide is reacted with steam to give carbon dioxide and hydrogen, may be combined with upstream gas generation stages such as hydrocarbon steam reforming or catalytic or non-catalytic partial oxidation or coal or coke gasification, for producing the starting carbon monoxide containing gas, and may be used in conjunction with a preceding high temperature shift stage (350 - 500"C, iron-chrome catalyst). Such generation stages commonly include a supply of hot process air or combustion air, which may conveniently be used in the initial heating of the shift catalyst precursor. The shift process according to the invention may be combined with downstream stages such as carbon dioxide removal and methanation or cryoscopic purification to produce synthesis gases or hydrogen. For such a low temperature shift process the catalyst precursor is preferably one of those containing zinc oxide and possible also alumina or chromium oxide.
Other processes in which catalysts made by the method of the invention may be used include methanol synthesis, hydrogenation of aldehydes and esters to alcohols, dehydrogenation of secondary alcohols to ketones, absorption of traces of oxygen from gases, and absorption of sulphur from gases containing sulphur compounds.
The copper-containing catalyst may be produced from the precursor or stabilised or used or regenerated under the protection of a guard material to keep from it poisons such as compounds of sulphur or halogens.
Example 1 A 25 ml sample of a commercially available low temperature shift catalyst precursor having the weight percentage composition Cu 34.0, ZnO 54.0, Al203 12.0 in the form of 3.6 by 5.4 mm squat cylindrical pellets, was charged to an electrically heated laboratory test reactor and heated to 80"C in a stream of dry nitrogen. Then with continued heating the nitrogen stream was replaced by a stream of a 3% v/v hydrogen in steam mixture at the rate of 150 litres per hour (space velocity 6000 hour~'). The temperature was raised at a controlled rate to 230"C and the hydrogen-steam flow kept up at 230"C for 4 hours. The steam content was then decreased to zero and the hydrogen flow rate increased at a controlled rate to 200 litres per hour of 100% hydrogen. The hydrogen flow was then kept going for a period, still at 230or. The activity of the resulting catalyst was then tested by passing over it a mixture of carbon monoxide (3.3% v/v), carbon dioxide (10% v/v), hydrogen (53% v/v) and steam 33% v/v) at a space velocity of 22500 hour , measuring the composition of the outlet gas and expressing the activity as a reaction velocity constant K.
All the above operations were carried out at atmospheric pressure.
The run was carried out several times at various concentrations of hydrogen in steam, heating-up rates, steam content decrease rates and 100% hydrogen treatment periods.
Control runs were carried out using the hydrogen/steam treatment only and using a dry hydrogen/nitrogen mixture with carefully controlled increase of hydrogen content from an initial 0.3% v/v to a final 5.0% v/v and carefully controlled temperature increase from 100"C to 2300C.
The values of K for these runs are shown in the Table.
TABLE H2 Heating Steam 100% H2 K,sedl Run No. % v/v time, hr. decrease period time, hr. hr.
1 0.5 3 1 1 9.4 2 3.0 1 1 1 9.1 3 0.5 1 0 1 10.5 4 0.5 1 1 15 10.2 5 3.0 3 0 1 9.2 6 3.0 3 1 15 11.0 7 0.5 3 0 15 10.1 8 3.0 1 0 15 9.8 Steam reduction only 3.0 1 - 0 3.5 Dry reduction - - - - 10.5 Whereas no conclusions can be drawn as to the best selection of conditions for the two-stage reduction, it is evident that two-stage reduction produces a catalyst having for practical purposes the same activity as the catalyst produced by the established dry-reduction process and three times that resulting from reduction only in steam-diluted hydrogen.
It will be appreciated that owing to the small scale of the runs, such that adiabatic over-heating of the catalyst does not readily take place, the conditions to be used on an industrial scale would be determined using the above conditions as a general guide.
Example 2 A low temperature shift reactor, forming part of the synthesis gas generation section of an ammonia synthesis plant and having two catalyst beds of 37 m" total catalyst volume in the same shell, was charged with a catalyst precursor having the % w/w composition 34 CuO, 54 ZnO, 12 Al2O3 in the form of squat cylindrical pellets 3.6 x 5.4 mm. The pellets were warmed to 120 - 1500C by passing through the beds a current of air from the compressors supplying the secondary reformer of the plant. Steam was then passed through the beds at a space velocity of about 200 hours until the bed temperature reached 218"C.
Hydrogen in the form of ammonia synthesis gas was then admitted at the rate of 1% V/v of the total feed. The bed temperature rose but was kept below 240"C by adjusting the hydrogen rate. After 10 hours the bed temperature began to all and the hydrogen rate was increased to 1.7%. After 24 hours the hydrogen rate was raised to 2% and over the next 16 hours to 5% with only a 5"C rise in temperature. At 5% hydrogen the temperature remained steady, showing that the first stage of reduction was complete. The steam flow was then decreased to zero over 2 hours, during which the temperature rose 5"C (hottest part of bed 232"C), whereafter the flow of synthesis gas (74% H2, rest N2, CH4 and noble gases) was maintained for 4 hours longer but caused no change in temperature. The reduced material was then cooled, the hydrpgen was expelled by means of nitrogen, and the reactor sealed until the remainder of the ammonia plant was in operation.
When later the low temperature shift reactor was brought into use by feeding to it the product gas of a high temperature shift reactor, it operated at a level of out put above its design level and about equal to that of one in which the reduction of the catalyst precursor had been effected by hydrogen diluted with nitrogen.
WHAT WE CLAIM IS: 1. A method of making a catalyst containing active metallic copper from a corresponding catalyst precursor containing copper oxide, which comprises treating the precursor in a first reducing stage at not over 275"C with a reducing gas mixture containing at least 50% V/v of steam and/or carbon dioxide until substantially complete reduction of the copper oxide to metallic copper has apparently taken place and thereafter treating it at not
**WARNING** end of DESC field may overlap start of CLMS **.

Claims (10)

**WARNING** start of CLMS field may overlap end of DESC **. TABLE H2 Heating Steam 100% H2 K,sedl Run No. % v/v time, hr. decrease period time, hr. hr.
1 0.5 3 1 1 9.4 2 3.0 1 1 1 9.1 3 0.5 1 0 1 10.5 4 0.5 1 1 15 10.2 5 3.0 3 0 1 9.2 6 3.0 3 1 15 11.0 7 0.5 3 0 15 10.1 8 3.0 1 0 15 9.8 Steam reduction only 3.0 1 - 0 3.5 Dry reduction - - - - 10.5 Whereas no conclusions can be drawn as to the best selection of conditions for the two-stage reduction, it is evident that two-stage reduction produces a catalyst having for practical purposes the same activity as the catalyst produced by the established dry-reduction process and three times that resulting from reduction only in steam-diluted hydrogen.
It will be appreciated that owing to the small scale of the runs, such that adiabatic over-heating of the catalyst does not readily take place, the conditions to be used on an industrial scale would be determined using the above conditions as a general guide.
Example 2 A low temperature shift reactor, forming part of the synthesis gas generation section of an ammonia synthesis plant and having two catalyst beds of 37 m" total catalyst volume in the same shell, was charged with a catalyst precursor having the % w/w composition 34 CuO, 54 ZnO, 12 Al2O3 in the form of squat cylindrical pellets 3.6 x 5.4 mm. The pellets were warmed to 120 - 1500C by passing through the beds a current of air from the compressors supplying the secondary reformer of the plant. Steam was then passed through the beds at a space velocity of about 200 hours until the bed temperature reached 218"C.
Hydrogen in the form of ammonia synthesis gas was then admitted at the rate of 1% V/v of the total feed. The bed temperature rose but was kept below 240"C by adjusting the hydrogen rate. After 10 hours the bed temperature began to all and the hydrogen rate was increased to 1.7%. After 24 hours the hydrogen rate was raised to 2% and over the next 16 hours to 5% with only a 5"C rise in temperature. At 5% hydrogen the temperature remained steady, showing that the first stage of reduction was complete. The steam flow was then decreased to zero over 2 hours, during which the temperature rose 5"C (hottest part of bed 232"C), whereafter the flow of synthesis gas (74% H2, rest N2, CH4 and noble gases) was maintained for 4 hours longer but caused no change in temperature. The reduced material was then cooled, the hydrpgen was expelled by means of nitrogen, and the reactor sealed until the remainder of the ammonia plant was in operation.
When later the low temperature shift reactor was brought into use by feeding to it the product gas of a high temperature shift reactor, it operated at a level of out put above its design level and about equal to that of one in which the reduction of the catalyst precursor had been effected by hydrogen diluted with nitrogen.
WHAT WE CLAIM IS: 1. A method of making a catalyst containing active metallic copper from a corresponding catalyst precursor containing copper oxide, which comprises treating the precursor in a first reducing stage at not over 275"C with a reducing gas mixture containing at least 50% V/v of steam and/or carbon dioxide until substantially complete reduction of the copper oxide to metallic copper has apparently taken place and thereafter treating it at not
over 275"C with a reducing gas mixture containing under 25% V/v of steam and/or carbon dioxide.
2. A method according to claim 1 in which the catalyst precursor is present in an uncooled bed and the content of reducing gas, calculated as equivalent hydrogen, in the mixture with at least 50% V/v or steam and/or carbon dioxide is under 3% V/v at the start of reduction, and is maintained at under 3% V/v or increased to 3 - 10% V/v as the first reduction stage proceeds.
3. A method according to claim 1 or claim 2 in which the more strongly reducing gas mixture contains less than 5% V/v of steam and carbon dioxide.
4. A method according to any one of the preceding claims in which the product of the first stage of reduction is cooled, dried and, if necessary, stabilised by dilute oxygen, to give a pre-reduced catalyst, and the second stage of reduction is carried out in the reactor in which the catalyst is to be used.
5. A method according to any one of the preceding claims when applied to a catalyst precursor containing zinc oxide.
6. A method according to claim 5 in which the catalyst precursor contains 2.5 to 20% w/w of alumina and/or 2.5 to 30% w/w of chromium oxide as Cr203.
7. A method according to claim 1 of making a catalyst containing metallic copper, substantially as described and as set out in either of the foregoing Examples.
8. A catalyst whenever made by a method according to any one of the preceding claims.
9. A chemical process carried out in the presence of a catalyst according to claim 8.
10. A process according to claim 9 which is a carbon monoxide shift process at under 300"C.
GB45758/75A 1975-11-04 1975-11-04 Catalyst and chemicalprocesses such as carbon monoxide shift Expired GB1561635A (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB45758/75A GB1561635A (en) 1975-11-04 1975-11-04 Catalyst and chemicalprocesses such as carbon monoxide shift
DE19762650443 DE2650443A1 (en) 1975-11-04 1976-11-03 METHOD OF MANUFACTURING AN ACTIVE METALLIC COPPER CONTAINING CATALYST
JP51132705A JPS5263193A (en) 1975-11-04 1976-11-04 Manufacture of catalysts containing active metal copper

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GB45758/75A GB1561635A (en) 1975-11-04 1975-11-04 Catalyst and chemicalprocesses such as carbon monoxide shift

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN115477314A (en) * 2022-10-08 2022-12-16 重庆建峰化工股份有限公司 Method for partially replacing copper catalyst of low-temperature shift converter

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GB2184367A (en) * 1985-12-18 1987-06-24 British Gas Plc Methanation catalysts
GB8714539D0 (en) * 1987-06-22 1987-07-29 Ici Plc Catalysts
JP2654515B2 (en) * 1987-11-05 1997-09-17 大阪瓦斯株式会社 Method for producing desulfurizing agent
US4826798A (en) * 1988-03-04 1989-05-02 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Carbon dioxide calcination of methanol dissociation catalysts
JP2765950B2 (en) * 1989-05-16 1998-06-18 大阪瓦斯株式会社 Fuel cell power generation system

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN115477314A (en) * 2022-10-08 2022-12-16 重庆建峰化工股份有限公司 Method for partially replacing copper catalyst of low-temperature shift converter

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JPS5263193A (en) 1977-05-25

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PS Patent sealed [section 19, patents act 1949]
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee