The present invention relates to alcohol alkoxylates or mixtures thereof and the use of such alcohol alkoxylates or mixtures as concentrated aqueous defoamers, antifoamers and deaerators. More specifically, the alcohol alkoxylates relate to linear long chain alcohol alkoxylates, to be used as additives for foam prevention, foam destruction and deaerating in various application areas.
In various industrial processes, occurrence of foams creates troublesome environments that could for example have a negative impact on reaction rates and prevent normal, optimised operation in general. Current methods to control foam include mechanical means such as the use of baffles and mixing control systems. In conjunction, chemical defoamers or antifoamers are often used. There are different classes of additives used in prevention, removal and mitigation of foam formation that work via differing mechanisms and are effective for different foam types (e.g. macro vs micro foams). While in principle these classes differ, the terms used to define them are often used interchangeably. In addition, many, if not most additives, do not solely perform only one function.
Antifoams are additives that prevent or inhibit foam formation from the outset, and are typically added to a potentially foaming solution prior to foam formation. Defoamers are compounds that are added to mixtures in order to destroy foam that has already been generated, targeting surface foam (macro foam) and aiming to bring about rapid foam collapse. Deaerators function in a manner similar to defoamers, also aiming to destroy foam that has already been generated, but they target sub-surface foam (micro foam).
Well known defoamers, antifoamers and deaerators include amongst others silicone oils as well as block copolymers of lower alkylene glycols. U.S. Pat. No. 6,534,550 describes defoamer compositions comprising alcohols, alcohol alkoxylates, emulsifier components and water to prevent and inhibit formation of foam in aqueous systems. The compositions of U.S. Pat. No. 6,534,550 are emulsions requiring a precise mixture of a number of different components to achieve the results. U.S. Pat. No. 6,562,875 describes the use of alkoxylated alcohols together with emulsifiers such as anionic surfactants as antifoamers in the paper industry. All prior art references are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
There is however an ongoing need for stable, simple, low cost, aqueous defoamers, antifoamers and/or deaerators in concentrated form for effective application in the chemical, household and industrial process industries.
The advantage of the inventive compounds or mixture of compounds and their use in aqueous systems, is the provision of concentrated surfactants with ultra-low particle sizes. The nature of the specific alcohol alkoxylates described result in insoluble, but ultra-dispersable surfactants for the effective defoaming, antifoaming and deaeration of aqueous feeds present in various chemical, household and industrial processes.
The present invention relates to a range of alcohol alkoxylates and their use as defoamers, antifoamers and/or deaerators for aqueous phases relating to various application areas. These include general defoaming, antifoaming and deaerating applications, specifically useful in, but not limited to, oil and gas applications, the agrochemical field, water treatment processes, as well as technology areas such as pulp and paper, fermentation, detergents, metal working fluids, paints and coatings, emulsion polymerization and construction.
The invention specifically teaches the use of an alcohol alkoxylate or an alcohol alkoxylate mixture as a concentrated defoamer, antifoamer and/or deaerator wherein the alcohol alkoxylate or alcohol alkoxylate mixture comprises at least an alcohol alkoxylate, wherein the alcohol alkoxylate has a molecular structure as shown in [I]:
R—O—(CH2(CH3)CHO)m—(CH2CH2O)n—H [I]
wherein R is a branched and/or linear alkyl group having from 20 to 50 carbon atoms, preferably 20 to 30 carbon atoms,
m=10-40, preferably 20-25
n=0-5, preferably 1-2.
The ratio of moles of PO to moles of EO is preferably from 14:1 to 35:1, more preferably from 14:1 to 20:1, and most preferably 20:1.
A feature of the invention is amongst others the extremely low dosing required. The alcohol alkoxylate or the alcohol alkoxylate mixture is added in a concentration of between 50 ppm and 3,000 ppm, more preferable between 100 and 2,500 ppm, and most preferable between 100 and 500 ppm.
The compounds described in this invention display good chemical and thermal stability. The temperature of use can range between 20 and 100° C. and more preferable between 20 and 80° C.
In addition, the alcohol alkoxylates described provide excellent defoaming, antifoaming and deaerating performance in concentrated form and are highly active. The use of the alcohol alkoxylate or the alcohol alkoxylate mixture is most beneficial when no additional additives, liquids or solids, such as emulsifiers, solvents and carriers, are added.
Additional advantages include, but are not limited, to the compounds of the invention being silicone-free, non-explosive, non-flammable, highly salt tolerant and non-corrosive.
The invention further describes a method of defoaming and/or deaerating and/or antifoaming an aqueous foam, wherein the aqueous foam comprises an aqueous phase and a gas, and wherein the method comprises:
an alcohol alkoxylate, wherein the alcohol alkoxylate has a molecular structure as shown in [I]:
R—O—(CH2(CH3)CHO)m—(CH2CH2O)n—H [I]
wherein R is a branched and/or linear alkyl group having from 20 to 50 carbon atoms, preferably 20 to 30 carbon atoms, m=10-40, preferably 20 to 25,
n=0-5, preferably 1 to 2, and
The alcohol alkoxylate or alcohol alkoxylate mixture of the present invention preferably has an average particle size less than 45 μm, more preferably less than 15 μm, and most preferably less than 4 μm. The low particle size improves the dispersibility of the defoamer/antifoamer in the aqueous feeds, resulting in easily dispersable compounds with minimal mixing or agitation required.
Unlike the prior art, the present invention is a concentrate defoamer which does not require emulsifiers or the like to achieve foam reduction/prevention.
The surfactants of the current invention are effective defoamers, antifoamers and/or deaerators for a wide variety of aqueous phases. The performance of the compositions can be optimally designed by tailoring the hydrophobe structures of the compounds, together with the number of propylene oxide (PO) and/or ethylene oxide (EO) units, for a specific application area.
Materials
A number of surfactants, namely alkoxylated alcohols, were synthesized according to standard procedures (see Experimental section) and their properties characterized.
The materials used in various tests to determine efficiency of compounds as defoamers/antifoamers/deaerators are shown in Table 1:
All examples represented by trade names above are marketed by Sasol Performance Chemicals, except UNILIN which was sourced from Baker Hughes.
Table 2 shows the commercial prior art defoamers that were used for comparative experiments.
Table 3 lists the foamers that were used for the various defoaming experiments.
Experimental Section
Synthesis of alkoxylated (PO/EO) alcohols used for the experiments Alcohols ranging from C12-32 were propoxylated and ethoxylated utilizing wellknown alkoxylation catalysts such as double metal cyanide (DMC) or KOH catalysts. Each alcohol product was targeted to consist of between 10 to 40 moles of propylene oxide and 0-5 mole of ethylene oxide. The samples were prepared in a 600 ml Parr reactor using the alkoxylation catalyst of choice. Each alcohol was propoxylated using purified propylene oxide at 130-150° C. and 40-60 psig and then ethoxylated using purified ethylene oxide at 150-160° C. and 40-60 psig in a single, continuous run.
Experiment 1:
The first test parameters aimed to compare additives' ability to destroy stable surface foam and act as a true defoamer.
Experimental Procedure:
The foam reduction test was aimed at comparing each defoamer's ability to knockdown or destroy foam that has already been generated. The test was performed by pouring 40 ml of nanopure water containing 2500 ppm commercial foamer (0610-3.5EO Sulfate) into the glass column of the foam analyzer. The solution was stirred for 30 seconds at 8000 rpm to generate foam. Stirring was stopped, and the foam was allowed to stabilize for 1 minute. After 1 minute, initial foam height was recorded and defoamer was added to the foamed solution at 2500 ppm. The solution was stirred for 1 minute at 8000 rpm and stopped. The foam was allowed to stabilize for 30 seconds, and final foam height was recorded. The test was repeated for each of the defoamers. A blank was also performed utilizing the same procedure except no defoamer was added. The total percentage of foam reduction from initial foam height to final foam height was calculated for each defoamer (see
Experiment 2:
Experimental Procedure:
A 40 ml solution containing 2500 ppm of HF100C (610-3.5EO sulfate-AES) in DI-H2O was added to the Kruss foam analyzer and sparged with air at a rate of 0.2 L/min. through a bottom fritted disc with an average pore size of 100-160 μm. Once the foam height reached˜150 mm, while continuing the air sparge, 2500 ppm of defoamer was added to the solution. Sparging was continued until a total sparge time of 500 seconds had elapsed or the foam height had reached the maximum capacity of the Kruss instrument. This test allowed for evaluation of the amount of initial foam knock-down immediately following the addition of defoamer (defoaming) along with the defoamer's ability to maintain this initial knock-down over time (antifoaming).
Experiment 3: The same experimental procedure as described for Experiment 1 was used.
Experiment 4:
The maximum defoaming performance obtained by different dosage rates of C2030-20PO-1EO after the lapse of an extended time period was compared.
Experimental Procedure:
A 2000 ml aqueous solution containing 2 500 ppm of HC100C (foaming medium) was added to a recirculating foaming apparatus and circulated at room temperature to generate foam. Once the foam height reach 30 cm, the defoamer C2030-20PO-1EO was dosed at different concentrations (100, 200, 300 and 400 ppm) while continuously circulating the foaming solution. The minimum foam height reached for each dosage was recorded and the % foam reduction calculated.
It follows that even at low dosage rates as 100 ppm, the invention's additives still exhibit superior performance.
Experiment 5:
The same experimental procedure as used for Experiment 4 was followed.
As described in the experimental method, when no additional change in defoaming performance were observed. the 02030-20PO-1EO additive exhibited superior defoaming performance over a wide range of temperatures, compared to commercial additives.
Experiment 6:
The same experimental procedure as used for Experiment 4 was followed.
The invention's C2030-20PO-1EO additive showed superior defoaming behavior together with various foamers, when compared to commercial defoaming additives.
Experiment 7:
An antifoaming test was performed to compare each additive's antifoaming potential and deaerating abilities to remove entrapped air by promoting liquid drainage from the lamella and bubble coalescence resulting in faster foam decay.
Experimental Procedure:
An antifoaming test was performed with the Krüss DFA100 and was aimed at comparing each of the defoamer's antifoaming and deaerating abilities. The test was performed by pouring 40 mL of nanopure water containing 2500 ppm commercial foamer (C610-3.5EO sulfate) and 2500 ppm defoamer into the instrument's glass column. Air was then sparged from the bottom through a filter plate with pore sizes ranging from 16-40 μm at a flow rate of 0.3 L/min. Sparging was continued and foam was generated for 2 minutes or until the foam reached the maximum height of the column (210 mm). Sparging was stopped, and the foam was allowed to decay for 15 minutes. The test was repeated for each defoamer as well as a blank that contained no defoamer. The defoamers' antifoaming abilities can be determined by comparing their maximum foam heights during the 2 minute sparging period (see Table 4). Comparing the rate of foam decay as a function of foam half-life (see
Table 4 shows that C2030-20PO-1EO was the only observable additive to exhibit enhanced antifoaming properties. It was the only additive tested where the maximum foam height (153.5 mm) did not reach the 210 mm foam height set point which triggered an automatic shutdown of foam formation.
Deaerator performance can be examined by comparing the rate of foam decay as a function of foam half-life, shown in
Comparative deaerator performance of the additives is as follows: C2030-20PO-1EO>PDMS, OH terminated>C1618-28PO-2EO>C1618-25PO-1EO>PPG-400.
Experiment 8:
Using the experimental procedure as described for Experiment 3, variation of the number of PO and EO units, using the same hydrophobe, aimed to compare each additive's ability to destroy stable surface foam and to act as a true defoamer by optimizing the PO/EO balance.
The results show that the defoamer 02030-20PO-1EO performed the best, but all defoamers were able to reduce the foam to a significant extent. The ratio of moles of PO to moles of EO is preferably from 14:1 to 35:1, more preferably from 14:1 to 20:1, and most preferably 20:1.
Experiment 9:
Defoamers/antifoamers perform well when they are ultra-dispersible in the feed. Low particle size improves the dispersibility of the defoamer/antifoamer in the aqueous feeds. Table 5 compares the defoamers based on particle size.
As can be seen, the alcohol alkoxylate or alcohol alkoxylate mixture of the present invention has a lower particle size than the prior art defoamer. The defoamer/antifoamer of the present invention preferably has an average particle size less than 45 μm, more preferably less than 15 μm, and most preferably less than 4 μm.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2020/030938 | 5/1/2020 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62842669 | May 2019 | US |