Claims
- 1. An apparatus for depressurizing a gravitating bed of retorted hydrocarbon-bearing shale particulates produced from an oil shale retort, said apparatus comprising in fluid-tight arrangement:
- (a) means defining a surge chamber connected to said retort to receive a gravitating bed of shale particles from said retort, the lower portion of said surge chamber means being a downwardly converging truncated cone;
- (b) means defining a gas injection chamber located below and connected to said surge chamber means to receive said gravitating particle bed from said surge chamber means and to inject gas into the body of said particle bed as said particle bed gravitates through said gas injection chamber means, said gas injection chamber means comprising (1) a first substantially cylindrical conduit fluid-tightly joined at its upper end to the lower end of said converging truncated cone, and its lower end terminating in an opening allowing for the gravitating particle bed to assume a free surface lying at its natural angle of repose from said opening, (2) a downwardly diverging truncated cone, the smaller, upper end of said diverging truncated cone being fluid-tightly mated to the exterior of said first cylindrical conduit at a distance above the lower end of said cylinder, (3) a second substantially cylindrical conduit fluid-tightly joined at its top to the lower end of said diverging truncated cone and extending below the point at which the surface of the gravitating particle bed, lying at its natural angle of repose and extending from said opening of said first cylindrical conduit, meets the inside surface of said second cylindrical conduit;
- (c) means for delivering a controlled flow of gas to said gravitating particle bed within said gas injection chamber means;
- (d) pressure control means operably connected to the upper region of said surge chamber means and to said gas injection chamber means for maintaining said surge chamber means at a pressure greater than the pressure of said retort;
- (e) means defining a seal leg chamber of a length to cross sectional area ratio of at least about three feet per square foot located below and connected to said gas injection chamber means to receive said gravitating particle bed from said gas injection chamber means, the configuration of said seal leg chamber means being such as to provide a resistance to downwardly directed gas flow through said particle bed as said particle bed gravitates through said seal leg chamber means, and
- (f) means defining a gas disengaging chamber located below and connected to said seal leg chamber means to receive said gravitating particle bed from said seal leg chamber means and to separate gas from said particle bed as said particle bed gravitates through said gas disengaging chamber means.
- 2. The apparatus defined in claim 1 wherein said chambers are enclosed within a plurality of separate vessels.
- 3. The apparatus defined in claim 1 wherein said chambers are enclosed within a single vessel.
- 4. The apparatus defined in claim 1 wherein said apparatus further comprises:
- (a) means, operably connected to said gas disengaging chamber means, for discharging said gravitating retorted oil shale particles from said gas disengaging chamber means to a location at a pressure lower than the pressure within said gas disengaging chamber means; and
- (b) level control means operably connected to said surge chamber means and to said means for discharging said gravitating retorted oil shale particles from said gas disengaging chamber means.
- 5. An apparatus for depressurizing a gravitating bed of retorted hydrocarbon-bearing shale particulates discharged from an oil shale retort operated at superatmospheric pressure, said apparatus comprising:
- (a) an elongated, substantially vertical, substantially fluid-tight, multi-chambered vessel means, constructed for serial flow of a gravitating bed of retorted oil shale particles therethrough and including
- (1) an uppermost surge chamber, connected to said retort to receive said retorted oil shale particles from said retort, the lower portion of said surge chamber being a downwardly converging first truncated cone,
- (2) a gas injection chamber located immediately below said surge chamber and connected to receive said gravitating particle bed from said surge chamber and to inject gases into the body of said gravitating particle bed as said particle bed gravitates through said gas injection chamber, said gas injection chamber comprising (A) a first substantially cylindrical conduit fluid-tightly joined at its upper end to the lower end of said first truncated cone, and its lower end terminating in an opening allowing for the gravitating particle bed to assume a free surface lying at its natural angle of repose from said opening, (B) a downwardly diverging truncated cone, the smaller, upper end of said diverging truncated cone being fluid-tightly mated to the exterior of said first cylindrical conduit at a distance above the lower end of said cylinder, (C) a second substantially cylindrical conduit fluid-tightly joined at its top to the lower end of said diverging truncated cone and extending below the point at which the surface of the gravitating particle bed, lying at its natural angle of repose and extending from said opening of said first cylindrical conduit, meets the inside surface of said second cylindrical conduit, and (D) a second downwardly converging truncated cone joined at its top in fluid-tight fashion to the lower end of said second cylindrical conduit,
- (3) an elongated seal leg chamber located immediately below and connected to said gas injection chamber and configured to provide a substantial resistance to downwardly directed gas flow through said gravitating bed, the length to cross-sectional area ratio of said seal leg chamber being at least about three feet per square foot,
- (4) a gas disengaging chamber located immediately below and connected to said seal leg chamber and configured to remove gases from said particle bed and to discharge said gravitating oil shale particles through a bottom opening;
- (b) differential pressure control means, operably connected to the upper region of said surge chamber and said gas injection chamber, configure to inject gas into said particle bed within said gas injection chamber so as to maintain a positive pressure differential between said surge chamber and the upper region of said gas injection chamber;
- (c) level control means operably connected to said surge chamber and configured to maintain the level of gravitating particles in said surge chamber above the top of said gas injection chamber;
- (d) discharge means operably connected to the bottom opening of said gas disengaging chamber and configured to receive said gravitating oil shale particles from said gas disengaging chamber through said bottom opening and discharge said particles to a location at a pressure less than the pressure within said gas disengaging chamber; and
- (e) means for delivering a controlled flow of gas to said gravitating particle bed within said gas injection chambers.
- 6. The apparatus defined in claim 5 wherein said second downwardly converging truncated cone converges at an angle between about 15 and 20 degrees with respect to the vertical.
- 7. The apparatus defined in claim 1 or 5 wherein said gas disengaging chamber is defined by the volume within a downwardly diverging truncated cone constructed with apertures to permit the upward passage of gas through said apertures to a gas collection chamber but to substantially inhibit the upward passage of solids therethrough, said gas collection chamber being a substantially toroidal enclosure, coaxially aligned with said truncated cone, and defined in part by the external wall of said truncated cone.
- 8. The apparatus defined in claim 7 wherein said downwardly diverging truncated cone in said gas disengaging chamber diverges at a smaller angle with respect to the vertical than the natural angel of repose for said gravitating particle bed.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 451,597, filed Dec. 20, 1982 now U.S. Pat. No. 4,435,271, issued Mar. 6, 1984 and a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 400,273, filed July 22, 1982, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,461,673 issued July 24, 1984.
US Referenced Citations (22)
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry |
"Premium Syncrude from Oil Shale Using Union Oil Technology" by Miller, Harvey and Hunter, prepared for the 1982 National Petroleum Refiners Association Annual Meeting held Mar. 21 to 23, 1982, at San Antonio, Tex. |
"Synthetic Crude Oil and Transportation Fuels from Oil Shale" by Randle and Kelley prepared for the 46th Midyear Meeting of the American Petroleum Institute's Refining Department, held May 11 to 14, 1981, in Chicago, Ill. |
Divisions (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
451597 |
Dec 1982 |
|