US2334632A - Recovery of nitrogen and oxygen - Google Patents

Recovery of nitrogen and oxygen Download PDF

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US2334632A
US2334632A US309446A US30944639A US2334632A US 2334632 A US2334632 A US 2334632A US 309446 A US309446 A US 309446A US 30944639 A US30944639 A US 30944639A US 2334632 A US2334632 A US 2334632A
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nitrogen
oxygen
air
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Koehler Franz
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F25REFRIGERATION OR COOLING; COMBINED HEATING AND REFRIGERATION SYSTEMS; HEAT PUMP SYSTEMS; MANUFACTURE OR STORAGE OF ICE; LIQUEFACTION SOLIDIFICATION OF GASES
    • F25JLIQUEFACTION, SOLIDIFICATION OR SEPARATION OF GASES OR GASEOUS OR LIQUEFIED GASEOUS MIXTURES BY PRESSURE AND COLD TREATMENT OR BY BRINGING THEM INTO THE SUPERCRITICAL STATE
    • F25J5/00Arrangements of cold exchangers or cold accumulators in separation or liquefaction plants

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  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
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  • Separation By Low-Temperature Treatments (AREA)

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Filed Dec.` 15, 1939 3 Sheets-Sheet 2 1{limi},-Ykiifll:Illl-- 1 1| IIII'IIII IIIIIIIIIJ IN VEN TOR. Franz /foehr HIS ATTORNEYS F. Kor-:HLER 2,334,632
RECOVERY OF NITROGEN AND OXYGEN Filed Dec. 15, `1939 5 Sheets-Sheet 5 Nov. 16, 1943.
Patented Nov. 16, 1943 l 2,334,632 RECOVERY or NITROGEN AND aoxYGEN Franz Koehler, Leuna, Germany; vested inthe Alien Property Custodian Application December 15, 1939, Serial No. 309,446 In Germany August 28, 1937 The present invention relates to improvements in, and apparatusv for, the recovery of nitrogen and oxygen.
It is already known that practically pure nitrogen and oxygen can be prepared by liqueiaction of air at high pressure in counter-cur-4 rent tubular heat-exchangers and subsequent rectification of the liquefied mixture. This method has two considerable disadvantages, however, namely (l) thatv a great part of the air to be separated into its constituents must be brought to high pressure and (2,) that all water and carbon dioxide must be removed from all the air before the liquefaction in order to avoid stoppages in the counter-current tubular heat-exchangers.
By' reason of these disadvantages, another process has been in use for several years in which considerably lower pressures are vused and in which it is unnecessary to separate the water vapor and carbon dioxide from all the air before the liquefaction. This method diiers mainly from that already mentioned in that theheat-exchange is not effected by a countercurrent iow of the gas to be cooledand the gas absorbing heat in tubular exchangers but in so- A calledv regenerators or recuperators which are cooled periodically, whereby the cooling required to make up for the heat gained is produced by releasing from pressure a. small amount (from about 4 to 10 per cent) of all the air compressed to high pressure (as for example 200 atmospheres) and if necessary by releasing from pressure one of the gases to be recovered in expansion engines. By reason of the advantages attending this method, it has acquired a great importance for the recovery of oxygen, although by the said method it is impossible to obtain pure nitrogen as well as the pure oxygen.
I have now found that by the last-mentioned method both nitrogen and oxygen of high purity can be prepared by withdrawing from the central part of the upper of the two columns used for rectification a small amountof a mixture of nitrogen and oxygen and using its low .heat content within the system.
In other processes for separating air Vinto its ecuperatorin which any qremoval of a .gasmixture from the system would be deemedinjurious because considerable amounts Aof nitrogen land u oxygen are necessary for the removal of the substances icarbon dioxide .and water) 'separated in the recuperator from the gases which are 'not purified according 'to the said process.
In spite of this, however, pure nitrogen and oxygen are obtained according to this inventionby the withdrawal of a certain amount lof a mixture'oi' nitrogen and V.oxygen vat acentral part 'of the upper. column, when the amount of highly compressed, preleminarily purili'ed yair is vincreased as a substitute for the withdrawn gas constituents in' which a recuperator is not used,
it has already been proposed to withdraw a mixture of nitrogenv and oxygen at a central part of the fractionation column in order to i obtain purer nitrogen and purer oxygen. It could not have been expected, however, that this step would be useful in a method using a mixture and as' an additional source for the cooling. rrhis additional 'highlyl compressed air provides the additional'amount oi `nitrogen and.
oxygen necessary'ior the continuous removal oi' the impurities from vthe recuperatorr- Moreover, by releasing the pressure on'the same, somuch cooling is effected that all the nitrogen of the.
lower column can be .used :as a trickling liquid .forthe uppercolumn. In this w'ay it is possible to recover in the same apparatus not only very pure oxygen but also very pure nitrogen.
The production of the additional highly compressed and preliminarily puried air, according to this modification, requires extra. `energy and therefore involves extra expense. This may be avoided according to another modifical tion of the invention by combining the steps usual in the low pressure process with the withdrawal of a small amount vof a nitrogen-oxygen mixture from the .central `part of 'the' upper of two columns used for rectification, i. e. by using expansion engines in which nitrogen withdrawn from the 'lower rectication column isreleased from pressure for tne purpose of cooling :eco-' nomically. rContrary to :expectation it :has `lbeen found that 'in this modification of ythe invention. in spite .or' the relinquishment vof apart 'of vthe trickling liquid by reason of the release from pressure ci a part vof the vnitrogen of tthe .lower column .in expansion machines,` only arelatively small amount of :a mixture .of nitrogen and oxygenv need be withdrawn .from the central part of the upper column. Additional Ilarge amounts of preliminarily purified, highly compressed air yare not necessary.
The invention therefore has the advantage oi requiring lonly a simple apparatus, a small expenditure oienergy and the use of low pressures for `the major `portion ci the air and of notrequiring a preliminary pur-incation of the major portion of the air.
" rated -int'o' its constituents.
rr1'i 'xturev of nitrogen and oxygen is free from wafter'fa'nd 'carbon'dioxida the content of water and The mixture of oxygen and nitrogen can be withdrawn from the rectification column at a point at which it contains from about v5 to 35,
preferably from to 25 per cent of oxygen. By withdrawing such a mixture there are produced in the rectification column such equilibrium relations that the amount of trickling liquid (nitrogen) present is sufficient for Washing the mixture of nitrogen and oxygen even lwhen a part of the nitrogen has been withdrawn from the lower column for the cooling in expansion engines.
The mixture of nitrogen and oxygen withdrawn y i 1 is withdrawn from the rectification column in the @manner known in the low pressure process in orderto be released from pressure in an expansion Vengine to about the temperature of liquid air. A specially advantageous modification of the presentinvention consists in adding the mixture offnitrogen and oxygen withdrawn from the middleA of the upper rectification column, after subjection 'to heat exchange, to the air to be sepa- Since this added carbon Vdioxide in the air to be separated into its {constituentss reduced. It is then readily possible for. these substances, which are deposited by the cooling of the air in the recuperators, to be further removed in the next working operation n bythe pure oxygen and the pure nitrogen without it being necessary to increase the amount of ,highly compressed air purified from 'water and carbondioxide supplied for the further cooling of the Amixture, tobe separated into its constituents inthe rectiiica'tion column, in order to render certain' the sublimation of the deposited substances in the recuperators.
A. In some cases it may be advantageous to com- I press the gas mixture withdrawn from the central part of theupper rectification column to high pressure after the heat exchange and to use it instead of thevhighly compressed air serving for ythe'cooling by releasing it from pressure, if desiredin .expansion engines. In this way the .-A. amount of air which must be freed from water f andcarbon dioxide before its cooling is still furpressed air supplied to the lower column through a spray nozzle behind the release valve, being thus compressed to the pressure of the lower column.
This measure lessens the amount of highly compressed air required to the amount required for the obtaining of pure oxygen alone, according to the known processand yet to obtain pure oxygen and pure nitrogen simultaneously from air in an output of approximately 100 per cent.
Another modiiication of this process consists in compressing the mixture of nitrogen and oxygen to the pressure of the lower rectification co1- Another way in which the low heat contentj 'A ofthe .gas mixture withdrawnv from the upper rectification columnV may be utilized consists in -using the mixture for the cooling of one or more additional recuperators which are arranged parl. allel with the pair of recuperators through which the nitrogen and oxygen flow. It mayv also be used for the preliminary cooling of the initial air while it is under low pressure.
Another particularly advantageous modifica-y tion ofthe present invention consistsY in introducing thegas mixture withdrawn from the upper column ofthe rectification vessel directly'into the lower column, preferably with the aid; of the energy produced when releasing the said highly compressed air from pressure. To this end the mixture ls caused to be sucked'by the highly comumn, for example, by means of a revolving compressor. The compressor may be driven by the energy released in an expansion engine by all or a part of the4 highly compressed air to be introduced into the lower column.
This method of returning a mixture of nitrogen and oxygen from the upper column into the lower one offers the combined advantage that any increase in the quantity of highly compressed air otherwise necessary is avoided and that a considerably larger amount of heat is withdrawn if the highly compressed air be released from pressure with the performance of external work than by the Thompson-Joule eiiect alone, so that the quantity of highly compressed air required to make up for the gains in heat may be decreased even more, unless they are compensated for in a known and inexpensive way by releasing lowpressure nitrogen from pressure in an expansion turbine. Thus the process makes it possible to simultaneously obtain pure nitrogen and pure oxygen from the air in an output of approximately per cent with an extremely small expenditure of energy.
In the process according to the present invention there is no interchange of heat between'the mixture of nitrogen and oxygen Withdrawn from the upper column and thehighly compressed air. Such interchange may be established, however, between part of the mixture and the highly compressed air, whereupon both fractions of the mixture are introduced in combination into the lower part of the rectication tower in the manner above referred to. Instead cf the said mixture of nitrogen and oxygen, a small amount of pure nitrogen also may be withdrawn in front of the regeneratorsA and used for cooling the highly compressed air.
Five embodiments of apparatus in accordance with this invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, but the invention is not restrcted to the particular embodiments shown.
In Fig. 1, A, B, C and D are recuperators which are operated alternately in known manner, E is a two-column apparatus for separating air into its constituents, F is a counter-current heat exchanger. J is a low pressure air turbo-compressor,
R is a pressure release valve and K is a high pressure air compressor.
The air compressed by the compressor J to about 4.5 atmospheres is cooled in the recuperators A, B, C and D almost to the liquefaction temperature and introduced through a pipe a into the lower column of the apparatus E for rectification. Furthermore a certain amount of air compressed to about 200 atmospheres and freed from water and carbon dioxide is led through a pipe b and the heat exchanger F and released from pressure through the pressure-release valve R into the lower rectification column. The cold constituents (oxygen and nitrogen) are led from the upper column, in which a low pressure prevails, through pipes c (nitrogen) and d (oxygen) into recuperators A, B, C, D from which they escape through c and d after absorbing heat. From about the middle of the upper rectification column, there is withdrawn through e a small amount of a mixture of nitrogen and oxygen which is led through heat exchanger F in counterfcurrent to the highly compressed air introduced at b.
The embodiment according to Figure 2 differs from that according to Figure 1 in that for the purpose of additional cooling, nitrogen under a pressure of about 4.5 atmospheres is withdrawn from the lower rectication column and supplied through a pipe f to acounter-current exchanger G in which Ait absorbs part of the heat of the highly compressed air precooled in F. This nitrogen is then released from pressure in the expansion engine H and Iled into the recuperators A and B together with the nitrogen escaping from the upper rectification column.
In Figure 3 the mixture of oxygen and nitrogen withdrawn through e from the middle part of the upper rectication column in this embodiment is compressed by the compressor K, after iiowing through heat-exchanger F, and used instead of the highly compressed air serving for the cooling by releasing it from pressure with the aid of the pressure release valve R.
According to Figure 4, the air having been compressed to about 4.5 atmospheres by the cornpressor J is cooled down nearly to liquefaction temperature in the cooling tanks A, B, C and D and fed through line a.' into the lower column of the separator E for rectification. Besides, a certain quantity of air free of water and carbon dioxide and compressed to about 200 atmospheres is released from pressure through line b, by way of the release valve R and the spray nozzle K, into the lower recticatlon column. The cold Separatio-n products oxygen and nitrogen flow through the lines c (nitrogen) and d (oxygen) into the recuperators A,'B, C and D, whence they are led oi through Cv and d' after absorbing heat from the incoming air. Approximately from the middle of the upper rectication column a small quantity of the mixture oi nitrogen and oxygen is withdrawn through f and introduced into the lower rectification column through the spray nozzle K. The highly compressed air, prior to being released from pressure, is cooled down in a heat exchanger F by means of a small amount of nitrogen branched on from line c and passed to F through line g.
In the embodiment according to Figure 5, in distinction from that according to Figure 4, the release from pressure of the highly compressed al1 is accomplished in an expansion apparatus L, which actuates a gas compressor M by which the mixture of nitrogen and oxygen withdrawn from the upper column through ,f is brought to the pressure of the lower column and then introduced into the latter. The highly compressed air is precooled in this case prior to being released from pressure, by a cold mixture of nitrogen and oxygen which is branched ofi from the line f and passed to F through line g.
This application is a continuation-in-part of my co-pending application Ser. No. 226,597, filed August 24, 1938. f
What I claim is: Y-
l. Apparatus for rectifying air into substantially pure nitrogen and oxygen which comprises a plurality of recuperators, a two-column rectification vessel. means for forcing air through said recuperators and into said rectification vessel, m'eans for forcing a comparatively small quantity of-highly compressed air into the lower column of the rectification vessel, means for reducing the pressure of said highly compressed air during its introduction into the rcctiiicatioii vessel'. means for separately removing substantially pure nitrogen and oxygen from the rectification vessel. means for conducting the same in heat-exchange relationship through withdrawing a mixture oi' nitrogen and oxygen from the upper coiurnn of tiie rectification vessel and means for recy cling said mixture.
2. Apparatus'according to claim 1 which com' lprises further means for precooling the said highly compressed air bei'ore introducing it into the rectification vessel by heat-exchange with the mixture 'of nitrogen and oxygen'withdrawn from the upper column of the rectification vessel.
3. Apparatus according to claiin l which comprises fuither means for introducing the gas mixture withdrawn from the' upper column o' the rectication vessel into the lower column of the `rectification vessel with the aid of the energy produced when releasing from pressure the .said
highly compressed air.
4. Apparatus according to claim l which comprises further means for operating a compressor by which the gas mixture withdrawn from the upper column of the rectification vessel is introduce-d. into the lower column of the rectification vessel with the aid of the energy produced when releasing from pressure the said highly compressed air.
5. Apparatus according to claim 1 which comprises further means for compressing the gas mixture withdrawn from the upper column of the rectication vessel and means -for releasing the pressure thereon while introducing it into the recticati'on vessel.
6. Apparatus according to claim l which coniprises further means for adding atleast a portion of the gas mixture withdrawn from-the upper column of the rectification vessel to the air to be rectified.
7. Apparatus according to claim l which comn prises further means for withdrawing nitrogen `from the lower column of the rectification vessel and for using it as cooling medium and a machine for releasing it from pressure.
8. Apparatus according toplaim 1 which com prises further-means for withdrawing nitrogen from the lower column of the rectication vessel and for using it as cooling medium for the said highly compressed air.
9. Apparatus according to claim 1 which com" prises further means for cooling the said highly compressed air by heat-exchange with a part of the nitrogen withdrawn from the upper end of the rectication vessel.
10. Process of rectifying pure nitrogen and oxygen frigerating recuperators periodically cooled to very low tem perature, passing the refrigerated air into a twocolumn rectification vessel vto thereby effect rectlflcation of the air into its major constituents, separately withdrawing said Aconstituents and using them as cooling medium for the said recuperators, withdrawing a relatively small amount of a mixture of nitrogen and oxygen from the upwhich comprises reper column of the said rectification vessel coinpressing it toA high pressure and introducing it the recuperatcrs, means for' air into substantially air at a slightly elevated pressure in tors, withdrawing a relatively small amount of a mixture of nitrogen and oxygen from the upper column of the said. rectification vessel compressing it tohigh pressure after using it as cooling medium and introducing it into the lower column of the rectification vessel while releasing it from pressure.`
12. Apparatus-according to claim 1 which comprises further means .for compressing the gas mixture withdrawn from the upper column of the rectiiication'vessel with-the aid of the energy produced when releasing from pressurethesaid highly compressed air and means for introducing it into the lower column of the rectiiication vessel. y
" 13.Process of rectifying airinto substantially pure nitrogen and oxygen which comprises re-y irigerating air without liquefaction at a slightly elevated pressure .in recuperators periodically cooled to .a very low temperature, passing the refrigerated air into a two-column rectification vessel, introducing a relatively small quantity of highly compressed air into the lower column oi said vessel while releasing the pressure thereon to thereby effect rectification of the air into itsv major constituents, separately withdrawing said constituents and using them as cooling medium forA the said recuperators, withdrawing a relatively small amount of a mixture of nitrogen and oxygen from the upper column of the said rectiiication vessel and utilizing its low heat content to cool said highly compressed air.
14. Apparatus for rectifying air into substantially pure nitrogen and oxygen which comprises a plurality of recuperators, a two-column rectilication vessel, means for` forcing air through said recuperators and into-said rectiiication vessel, means for forcing a comparatively small quantity of highly compressed air into the lower column oi the rectification vessel, means for reducing the pressure of said highly compressed air during its introduction into the rectication vessel, means for separately removing substantially pure nitrogen and oxygen from the rectiiication vessel, means for conducting the same in heat-exchange relationship through the recuperators, means for withdrawing a mixture of nitrogen and oxygen from the upper column of the rectication vessel and means for conducting said mixture in heat-exchange relationship with the highly compressed air.
FRANZ KOEHLER.
US309446A 1937-08-28 1939-12-15 Recovery of nitrogen and oxygen Expired - Lifetime US2334632A (en)

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2568223A (en) * 1944-10-20 1951-09-18 Baufre William Lane De Process and apparatus for extracting oxygen from atmospheric air
US2622416A (en) * 1949-03-30 1952-12-23 Standard Oil Dev Co Separation of low boiling gas mixtures
US2626510A (en) * 1947-06-18 1953-01-27 Air Prod Inc Air fractionating cycle and apparatus
US3181306A (en) * 1961-01-11 1965-05-04 Air Prod & Chem Argon separation

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2568223A (en) * 1944-10-20 1951-09-18 Baufre William Lane De Process and apparatus for extracting oxygen from atmospheric air
US2626510A (en) * 1947-06-18 1953-01-27 Air Prod Inc Air fractionating cycle and apparatus
US2622416A (en) * 1949-03-30 1952-12-23 Standard Oil Dev Co Separation of low boiling gas mixtures
US3181306A (en) * 1961-01-11 1965-05-04 Air Prod & Chem Argon separation

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