US1738202A - Process of and apparatus for carbonizing material containing oil, fat, tar, or the like - Google Patents

Process of and apparatus for carbonizing material containing oil, fat, tar, or the like Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1738202A
US1738202A US709077A US70907724A US1738202A US 1738202 A US1738202 A US 1738202A US 709077 A US709077 A US 709077A US 70907724 A US70907724 A US 70907724A US 1738202 A US1738202 A US 1738202A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
chamber
carbonizing
gas
auxiliary
tar
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US709077A
Inventor
Company The Cleveland Trust
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US709077A priority Critical patent/US1738202A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1738202A publication Critical patent/US1738202A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10BDESTRUCTIVE DISTILLATION OF CARBONACEOUS MATERIALS FOR PRODUCTION OF GAS, COKE, TAR, OR SIMILAR MATERIALS
    • C10B1/00Retorts
    • C10B1/02Stationary retorts
    • C10B1/04Vertical retorts

Definitions

  • My invention relates to methods of and means for carbonizing material such as coal, shale, garbage, lignite, or similar substances, containing oil, tar, fats, or the like.
  • the object of the invention is to provide a method and apparatus for such treatment whereby these contained substances may be recovered in the form of liquids or gas, or both, in an economical and efficient manner.
  • the said invention consists of a method and apparatus hereinafter fully described and particularly pointed out in the claims.
  • my present invention consists of a modification oi the invention shown, described and claimed in my pending application, Serial No. 700,965, filed March 21, 1924.
  • Figure 1 represents diagrammatically, an apparatus for practicing my invention.
  • Fig. 2 represents, also diagrammatically, a
  • FIGs. 3 and 4 represent still "further modifications.
  • Fig. 5 is a vertical section through a material charging device which may convenientas ly be employed with my invention; in. this figure the device is shown associated with that form of my invention represented in Fig. 1.
  • the apparatus illustrated by Fig. 1 consists of a chamber 1 for carbonizing the matc:ial
  • an to be treated having a main portion 2, which conveniently may be called a carbonizing chamber, and an offset portion 3, which may conveniently be called an auxiliary chamber, the apparatus having the general construcis tion of an apparatus shown, described and claimed in my above-mentioned pending application.
  • Themain portion 2 01 the chamber is surrounded by a heating chamber 4 which may be connected with any suitable source of heat 1924.
  • a heating chamber 4 which may be connected with any suitable source of heat 1924.
  • the top and bottom of the interior of the ofi'set portion. 3 is connected by means of ducts 7 and 8 respectively, with a heater 10, by means of which and a suitable blower 11, a heated gas may be circulated through the oil'- set portion and the material therein.
  • a suitable charging opening 12 is provided in the portion 3 for the introduction of the material in any suitable and well known manner, for example, by means of the charging device 12. shown in Fig. 5, and a suitable outlet 13 is provided at the bottom of the portion 2 for the withdrawal of the residuum after the material has been treated.
  • the charging device shown in Fig. 5, which is a vertical section through opening 12 and chamber 3 of Fig. 1, is merely illustrative of one of several suitable forms of charging device which may be employed with my invention.
  • A. suitable-gas outlet 14 is provided in the duct 8 for taking oil the gas produced.
  • the material in the portion 2 of the chamber is heated by means of the exterior heating chamber 4 to the degree required to distill the material therein and volatilize the volatilizable substances carried thereby.
  • a flow of gas is thus induced which travels upwardly through the portion 2, then downwardly through the offset portion 3, and then again to the heater, the excess gas being taken oii through the gas outlet 14.
  • the products distilled from the carbonizable material are liquefied and the newly introduced material is heated during its passage towards the carbonizing chamber 2.
  • the above described apparatus may be modified by providing an auxiliary duct 15" provided with a valve 16 and connected at one end with the duct 7 (which is provided with a valve 16) and at the other end with the bottom part 2 of the chamber 1.
  • a valve 16 By opening the valve 16, and then closing valve 16, the gas, in addition to circulating through the portion 3, also circulates through the entire chamber 1, as will be understood. Both valves may be opened, so that partof the heated gas may pass through the portion 3 and part through the entire chamber.
  • Fig. 2 I have illustrated a modification of the above described apparatus, wherein the oflset portion 3 is provided with the exterior heating chamber 4 and the main portion 2 connected interiorly with the heater 10.
  • the process is similar to that first described excepting that the parts 2 and 3 are respectively interiorly and exteriorly heated instead of exteriorly and interiorly respectively.
  • Fig. 3 I have shown a further modification .wherein the entire chamber is upright, the part 3 being above the part 2 as shown.
  • the heater 10 is connected with the upper and lower ends of part 3 and the part 2 provided with the heating chamber 4 as is the case of the device illustrated by Fig. 1, and the material being fed into the apparatus at the top charging opening 12. In this case the process would be the same described in connection with Fig. 1.
  • the lower part 2 is connected with the heater 10 and interiorly heated, and the Epper part 3 provided with the heating cham-
  • the last described device may be modified as in the case of the apparatus of Fig. 1, by providing the auxiliary duct 15 and the valves 16 and 16 so that gas may be caused to circulate entirely through the whole chamber 1 in addition to' circulating specifically through the part 2, or only through the lower chamber portion.
  • a suitable receptacle 17 is provided below the chamber portion 3 into which the outlet 13 discharges, and which receives the liquids formed by condensation in said chamber portion 3, all as described in my said above mentioned pending application.
  • the temperature of the heating medium applied to the offset; portion 3 of the chamber may be so' regulated asto recover such part as may be desired or all of the gases passmg through the material in part 3 as are capable of condensation into a li uid, as will be readily understood by those s 'lled in the art.
  • the temperature of the heating medium applied to part 3 of the chamber may be so regulated that all of the vaporizable material
  • Apparatus for carbonlzing sohd carbonlzable material comprising an imperforate container formed with a carbonizing chamber and a communicating auxiliary chamber so related to the carbonizing chamher that liquids formed in the auxiliary chamber will not run by gravity into the carboniz ing chamber; means for feeding solid carbonizable material into the auxiliary chamber and in a continuous body therethrough and then into and through the carbonizing chamber; means for externally heating one of said chambers; means for heatm and c1rcu-' lating a gas through the other 0' said cham- PIERRE PLANTINGA.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Oil, Petroleum & Natural Gas (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Carbon And Carbon Compounds (AREA)

Description

Dec. 3, 1929. P. PLANTINGA 1,738,202
PROCESS OF AND APPARATUS FOR CAHBONIZING MATERIAL CONTAINING OIL, FAT, TAR, OR THE LIKE Filed April 26, 1924 147702/VEY.
atented Dec. 3, 1929 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE PIERRE IPLANTINGA, O13 CLEVELAND, OHIO; THE CLEVELAND TRUST (ZOMPANY EXECUTOR F SAID PETERRE PLANTINGA, DECEASED PROCESS OF AND APPARATUS FOR CARBONIZING MATERIAL CONTAINING OIL, FAT,
TAR, OR THE LIKE v Application filed April 26,
My invention relates to methods of and means for carbonizing material such as coal, shale, garbage, lignite, or similar substances, containing oil, tar, fats, or the like. The object of the invention is to provide a method and apparatus for such treatment whereby these contained substances may be recovered in the form of liquids or gas, or both, in an economical and efficient manner.
The said invention consists of a method and apparatus hereinafter fully described and particularly pointed out in the claims.
Mord specifically, my present invention consists of a modification oi the invention shown, described and claimed in my pending application, Serial No. 700,965, filed March 21, 1924.
The annexed drawing and the following description set forth in detail certain means m embodying my invention, embodying that part of my invention relating to the apparatus, the disclosed means, however, constituting but one of the various mechanical forms in which the principle of said part of the invention may be employed.
In the said annexed drawing:
Figure 1 represents diagrammatically, an apparatus for practicing my invention.
Fig. 2 represents, also diagrammatically, a
g modified form of said apparatus.
Similarly, Figs. 3 and 4 represent still "further modifications.
Fig. 5 is a vertical section through a material charging device which may convenientas ly be employed with my invention; in. this figure the device is shown associated with that form of my invention represented in Fig. 1.
The apparatus illustrated by Fig. 1 consists of a chamber 1 for carbonizing the matc:ial
an to be treated, having a main portion 2, which conveniently may be called a carbonizing chamber, and an offset portion 3, which may conveniently be called an auxiliary chamber, the apparatus having the general construcis tion of an apparatus shown, described and claimed in my above-mentioned pending application.
Themain portion 2 01 the chamber is surrounded by a heating chamber 4 which may be connected with any suitable source of heat 1924. Serial No. 709,077.
(not shown) as for example, a current of hot air, through an inlet 5 and an outlet 6.
The top and bottom of the interior of the ofi'set portion. 3 is connected by means of ducts 7 and 8 respectively, with a heater 10, by means of which and a suitable blower 11, a heated gas may be circulated through the oil'- set portion and the material therein. A suitable charging opening 12 is provided in the portion 3 for the introduction of the material in any suitable and well known manner, for example, by means of the charging device 12. shown in Fig. 5, and a suitable outlet 13 is provided at the bottom of the portion 2 for the withdrawal of the residuum after the material has been treated. The charging device shown in Fig. 5, which is a vertical section through opening 12 and chamber 3 of Fig. 1, is merely illustrative of one of several suitable forms of charging device which may be employed with my invention.
A. suitable-gas outlet 14 is provided in the duct 8 for taking oil the gas produced.
In operating the above described apparatus,'the material in the portion 2 of the chamber is heated by means of the exterior heating chamber 4 to the degree required to distill the material therein and volatilize the volatilizable substances carried thereby. A flow of gas is thus induced which travels upwardly through the portion 2, then downwardly through the offset portion 3, and then again to the heater, the excess gas being taken oii through the gas outlet 14. In the cham-' her 3, the products distilled from the carbonizable material are liquefied and the newly introduced material is heated during its passage towards the carbonizing chamber 2.
The above described apparatus may be modified by providing an auxiliary duct 15" provided with a valve 16 and connected at one end with the duct 7 (which is provided with a valve 16) and at the other end with the bottom part 2 of the chamber 1. By opening the valve 16, and then closing valve 16, the gas, in addition to circulating through the portion 3, also circulates through the entire chamber 1, as will be understood. Both valves may be opened, so that partof the heated gas may pass through the portion 3 and part through the entire chamber.
In Fig. 2 I have illustrated a modification of the above described apparatus, wherein the oflset portion 3 is provided with the exterior heating chamber 4 and the main portion 2 connected interiorly with the heater 10. In this case, the process is similar to that first described excepting that the parts 2 and 3 are respectively interiorly and exteriorly heated instead of exteriorly and interiorly respectively.
In Fig. 3 I have shown a further modification .wherein the entire chamber is upright, the part 3 being above the part 2 as shown. The heater 10 is connected with the upper and lower ends of part 3 and the part 2 provided with the heating chamber 4 as is the case of the device illustrated by Fig. 1, and the material being fed into the apparatus at the top charging opening 12. In this case the process would be the same described in connection with Fig. 1.
In Fig. 4, I have shown a modification of the apparatus of Fig. '3, such modification being similar to that effected by the apparatusof Fig. 2 over that of Fig. 1. In this case,
therefore, the lower part 2 is connected with the heater 10 and interiorly heated, and the Epper part 3 provided with the heating cham- The last described device may be modified as in the case of the apparatus of Fig. 1, by providing the auxiliary duct 15 and the valves 16 and 16 so that gas may be caused to circulate entirely through the whole chamber 1 in addition to' circulating specifically through the part 2, or only through the lower chamber portion.
In the forms of apparatus shown in Figs.
1 and 2, a suitable receptacle 17 is provided below the chamber portion 3 into which the outlet 13 discharges, and which receives the liquids formed by condensation in said chamber portion 3, all as described in my said above mentioned pending application.
It will thus be seen that in each of the above mentioned apparatuses, a part of the carbonization takes place in one part of the chamber as a result of the heated gas assing through the materials in such cham er part, which gas imparts its heat to the material by direct contact, and that another part of the carbomzation takes place in another part of the chamber as a result of heat conducted to the material in said chamber part from a heating medium applied externally to said part.
In the form of apparatus shown in Figs. 1 and 2, the temperature of the heating medium applied to the offset; portion 3 of the chamber may be so' regulated asto recover such part as may be desired or all of the gases passmg through the material in part 3 as are capable of condensation into a li uid, as will be readily understood by those s 'lled in the art.
In the form of apparatus shown in Figs. 3 and 4, the temperature of the heating medium applied to part 3 of the chamber may be so regulated that all of the vaporizable material,
including those which are capable of condensation into a liquid, pass out of the apparatus, after which all or such part as may be desired of the condensable material may be recovered by any suitable apparatus, as will be understood by those skilled in the art.
What I claim is:
1. In a process of carbonizing solid car bonizable material in a container comprising a carbonizing chamber and a communicating auxiliary chamber so related to the carbonizing chamber that liquids formed in the auxiliary chamber will not run by gravity into the carbonizing chamber, and in which the solid carbonizable material is fed into the auxiliary chamber and in a continuous body therethrough and then into and through the carbonizing chamber, the improvement which comprises, passing a hot gas substantially chemically inert with respect to said carbonizable material through the body. of the latter in a direction opposite to the feed thereof, reheating said gas externally of the container alternately to the successive passages of the gas through the container, said gas being circulated in an endless conduit, liquefying in the auxiliary chamber the products distilled from the carbonizable material, causing the liquids formed in the auxiliary chamber to move by gravity toward the material inlet of said auxiliary chamber, collecting and drawing off the liquid from the auxiliary chamber, and applying carbonizing heat to the exterior of one of said chambers.
2. In a process of carbonizing solid carbonizable material in a container comprising a carbonizing chamber and a communicating auxiliary chamber so related to the carbonizing chamber that liquids formed in the auxiliary chamber will not run by gravity into the carbonizing chamber, and in which the solid carbonizable material is fed into the auxiliary chamber and in a continuous body therethrough and then into and through the carbonizing chamber, the improvement which comprises, passing a hot gas substantially chemically inert with respect to said carbonizable material through the body of the latter in adirection opposlte to the feed thereof, reheating said gas externally of the container alternately to the successive passages of the gas through the container, said gas being circulated in an endless conduit, bypassing the carbonizing chamber with an additional amount of hot gas derived from said endless conduit, said additional gas being passed through said auxiliary chamber in a direction opposite to the feed of the material therethrou 'h, liquefyin in the auxiliary chamber the products istilled from the carbonizable material, causing the liquids formed in the auxiliary chamber to move by gravity toward the material inlet of the aux iliary chamber, collecting and drawing oil the liquid from the auxiliary chamber, and applying carbonizing heat to the exterior of said carbonizing chamber.
3. In a process of carbonizing solid carbonizable material in a container comprising a carbonizing chamber and a communicating auxiliary chamber so related to the carbonizeing chamber that liquids formed in the auxiliary chamber will not run by gravity into the carbonizing chamber, and in which the solid carbonizable material is fed into the auxiliary chamber and in a continuous body therethrough and then into and through the carbonizing chamber, the improvement which comprises, passing a hot gas substantially chemicallyinert with respect to said carbonizable material through the body of the latter in one of said chambers in a direction opposite to the feed of the material therethrough, reheating said gas externally of the container alternately to the successive passages of the gas through said one chamber, said gas being circulated in an endless conduit, liquefying in the auxiliary chamber the products distilled from the carbonizable ma-. terial, causing the liquids formed inthe auxiliary chamber to move by gravity toward the material inlet of the condensing chamber, and applying carbonizing heat to the exterior of that chamber through which the hot gas is not passed.
4:. Apparatus for carbonlzing sohd carbonlzable material comprising an imperforate container formed with a carbonizing chamber and a communicating auxiliary chamber so related to the carbonizing chamher that liquids formed in the auxiliary chamber will not run by gravity into the carboniz ing chamber; means for feeding solid carbonizable material into the auxiliary chamber and in a continuous body therethrough and then into and through the carbonizing chamber; means for externally heating one of said chambers; means for heatm and c1rcu-' lating a gas through the other 0' said cham- PIERRE PLANTINGA.
ing chamber; means for feeding solid carbonizable material into the auxiliary chamber and in a continuous body therethrough and then into and, through the carbonizing chamber; means for externally heating the carbonizing chamber; means for heating and circulating a gas through the container in a. direction opposite to the feed of the carboniz-
US709077A 1924-04-26 1924-04-26 Process of and apparatus for carbonizing material containing oil, fat, tar, or the like Expired - Lifetime US1738202A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US709077A US1738202A (en) 1924-04-26 1924-04-26 Process of and apparatus for carbonizing material containing oil, fat, tar, or the like

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US709077A US1738202A (en) 1924-04-26 1924-04-26 Process of and apparatus for carbonizing material containing oil, fat, tar, or the like

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1738202A true US1738202A (en) 1929-12-03

Family

ID=24848393

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US709077A Expired - Lifetime US1738202A (en) 1924-04-26 1924-04-26 Process of and apparatus for carbonizing material containing oil, fat, tar, or the like

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1738202A (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2448223A (en) * 1936-06-30 1948-08-31 Azote & Prod Chim Low-temperature distillation of fuels by direct contact with reheated distillate vapors
US2626235A (en) * 1945-03-15 1953-01-20 Socony Vacuum Oil Co Inc Method and apparatus for solid transfer
US2796390A (en) * 1952-01-31 1957-06-18 Socony Mobil Oil Co Inc Process of retorting of oil shale
DE1222466B (en) * 1961-12-01 1966-08-11 Otto & Co Gmbh Dr C Two-stage degassing process for the production of shaped coke
US3384569A (en) * 1966-02-21 1968-05-21 Exxon Research Engineering Co Oil shale retorting

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2448223A (en) * 1936-06-30 1948-08-31 Azote & Prod Chim Low-temperature distillation of fuels by direct contact with reheated distillate vapors
US2626235A (en) * 1945-03-15 1953-01-20 Socony Vacuum Oil Co Inc Method and apparatus for solid transfer
US2796390A (en) * 1952-01-31 1957-06-18 Socony Mobil Oil Co Inc Process of retorting of oil shale
DE1222466B (en) * 1961-12-01 1966-08-11 Otto & Co Gmbh Dr C Two-stage degassing process for the production of shaped coke
US3384569A (en) * 1966-02-21 1968-05-21 Exxon Research Engineering Co Oil shale retorting

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
GB617284A (en) Process for producing volatile hydrocarbons from hydrocarbonaceous solids
US1738202A (en) Process of and apparatus for carbonizing material containing oil, fat, tar, or the like
US1551956A (en) Process of distilling wet combustible material
US2208705A (en) Tunnel oven used for the carbonization at low temperatures of oil shale, lignite, coal, and similar materials
US1676675A (en) Process of recovering light hydrocarbons from carbonaceous material
US1602819A (en) Process and apparatus foe
US1675315A (en) Process of continuously distilling carbonaceous fuel
US1490213A (en) Process for treating oil shale
GB283259A (en) Improvements relating to the distillation of carbonaceous substances
US2015051A (en) Drying and incinerating of sewage, garbage, etc.
US1218588A (en) Art of producing aluminum chlorid.
US1906863A (en) Coking and gasification of hydrocarbons
US1586306A (en) Tunnel oven
US1796100A (en) Distillation process and apparatus therefor
US1484258A (en) Process for the treatment of coal
US1975396A (en) Coal carbonizing apparatus
US1703419A (en) Method and apparatus for distillation
US2064486A (en) Method of heating tar
US543256A (en) lynen
US1627321A (en) Process for the destructive distillation of solid carbonaceous materials
US1706825A (en) Paul dvobkovitz
US1423716A (en) Process of distilling shale
US1654797A (en) Method of distilling hydrocarbons
US1911597A (en) Assigstob to h
US1785565A (en) Apparatus for distilling solid carbonizable materials