The present invention relates generally to chemical multiphase processes. More particularly, the invention relates to a device for countercurrent multiphase contacting, which integrates a centrifugal separation and countercurrent mass transfer.
In the chemical industry, 80-90% of all industrial processes involve multiphase contacting. A predominant part of these processes are found in affinity-difference based separation. This is an important method for purification of raw resources and product streams. Examples of this are distillation (gas-liquid phase), crystallization (liquid-solid phase, solid-liquid-solid phase, gas-liquid-solid phase) and extraction with an immiscible liquid (liquid-liquid) or solid adsorbent (liquid-solid). As indicated between the parentheses for these examples, generally two or more aggregation phases (gas, liquid, solid, or mixtures thereof) are present, which are counter-currently contacted in these processes. The countercurrent flow is accomplished through the density difference of the different phases involved and gravitational acceleration. The countercurrent contacting of the phases is vital for the process efficiency. Another important part of multiphase processes are multiphase reactors, usually employed when poorly soluble and often very reactive gases are the reactant or product. For multiphase reactions that are product inhibited or equilibrium determined, countercurrent contacting of the phases is essential for process efficiency. The remaining part of multiphase reactions can be operated co-currently almost equally efficient. For all separation processes and the majority of multiphase reactions, the mass transfer rate determines the process efficiency and process design. In conventional equipment, such as packed columns or tray columns, the mass transfer rate is low, which leads to large equipment, easily ten to hundred meters high and several meters in diameter.
An increase in mass transfer rate directly translates into smaller equipment with increased efficiency of materials and a reduction of energy consumption, which leads to a reduction in operating and investment costs. In more sophisticated equipment, for example equipment by CINC or Rousselet-Robatel, a higher mass transfer is achieved by first intense mixing of the phases followed by a centrifugal separation. The intense mixing step generally makes a fine dispersion with high mass transfer that will bring the phases close to the equilibrium position. For most extractions, several (10-100) equilibrium steps are desired. Therefore, after the centrifugal separation, the phases are pumped to the next stages, in a countercurrent fashion. The CINC process is then in essence a repetition of units. A multistage process rapidly increases in size with an increase in number of stages. Furthermore, the centrifuge separation unit is large when compared to the mixing stage. Rousselet-Robatel integrated a similar system on a single axis without the intense mixing step but with a smaller centrifuge stage. In another example, Ramshaw used spinning discs for generating thin films with high surface area for highly efficient contacting of gas and liquid in a single stage, and gravity for establishing countercurrent flow between stages with a paring tube, similar to a system by Alfa Laval.
What is needed is an efficient and compact countercurrent device for multiphase and single phase contacting.
To address the needs in the art a multiphase contacting stage is provided that includes a first rotatable disc having a hollow disc-shaped cavity, an input port and an output port, and a second rotatable disc having a channeled cavity, an input port and an output port, where the second rotatable disc is disposed in the hollow disc-shaped cavity of the first rotatable disc, where the first rotatable disc and the second rotatable disc are concentric about an axis, where the multiphase contacting stage operates to integrate centrifugal separation and countercurrent mass transfer of a material for separation.
In one aspect of the invention, the first rotatable disc and the second rotatable disc rotate about the axis and are spaced apart on the axis at a distance as low as 0.05 mm.
According to another aspect of the invention, the first rotatable disc and the second rotatable disc rotate at a speed up to 5000 rpm.
In a further aspect of the invention, the first rotatable disc and the second rotatable disc are co-rotating or counter-rotating.
In yet another aspect of the invention, the first rotatable disc rotates at a first speed and a second rotatable disc rotates at a second speed.
According to one aspect of the invention, a first contacting stage is stacked on at least one other the contacting stage, where the material for separation commutes between the stacked contacting stages through the input ports and the output ports.
In a further aspect of the invention, the first rotatable disc and the second rotatable disc are disposed to generate a centrifugal acceleration of the material for separation within the contacting device when the first rotatable disc and the second rotatable disc rotate.
In another aspect of the invention, the first rotatable disc includes a gas input port.
In yet another aspect of invention, the channels in the second rotatable disc are disposed to separate a relatively light phase from a relatively heavy phase in the material for separation, where the relatively light phase moves towards the axis of rotation, where the relatively heavy phase moves radially outwards.
According to another aspect of the invention, the rotation speed depends on properties of the material for separation, the disc radii, and the disc spacing.
In a further aspect of the invention, the first rotatable disc has heat transfer channels.
In yet another aspect of the invention, a rotor is disposed between the first rotatable disc and the second rotatable disc.
According to one aspect of the invention, the second rotatable disc comprises a pair of concentric disc plates separated by the walls of the channels. In one aspect, the opposing disc plates have a separation distance as low as 0.05 mm. Further, the opposing disc plates have the same diameter or different diameters.
According to one aspect of the invention, the channels have a linear or non-linear shape extending radially outward.
In yet another aspect of the invention, the first rotatable disc includes a heat input port.
In a further aspect of the invention, the first rotatable disc includes a first charge polarity and the second rotatable disc comprises a second charge polarity, where the first charge polarity is opposite the second charge polarity.
In a farther aspect of the invention, a surface of the first disc and/or a surface of the second disc includes a catalyst. In one aspect, the disc surface includes microstructures.
a-1b show computer renderings of a hollow pumping disc without an axis, according to one embodiment of the invention.
a-5b show constructional drawings of three dimensional single stage contactor, according to one embodiment of the invention.
a-6b show cross section drawings of the y-z plane of
a-7d show a spiral flow of light phase (heptane, white) in heavy phase (water, grey) towards the centre of the disc for disc speeds between 50 and 300 rpm, according to one embodiment of the invention.
e-7f shows emulsified flow of heptane in water at rotation speeds above 500 rpm, according to one embodiment of the invention.
a-12b show two different pumping disc configurations, where the top disc and bottom disc of the pumping disc have equal or different diameters, according to further embodiments of the invention.
One embodiment of the current invention includes a device for countercurrent multiphase contacting, which has closely spaced rotating discs, preferably a spacing of 5 mm or less, more preferably a spacing of 2 mm or less and possibly even more preferable a spacing of 0.05 mm, that have individual rotation speeds up to 5000 rpm for each disc, where each disc is individually co-rotating or counter-rotating with respect to the other discs. A collection of two or more discs forms a contacting stage. The rotation generates a centrifugal acceleration that separates the phases in a single stage, the light phase moves towards the axis of rotation, the heavy phase moves radially outwards. The discs are disposed in such a way that countercurrent contacting takes place in this stage but also takes place from stage to stage. To this end, a hollow disc (see
In combination with the countercurrent contacting and separation at least a tenfold increased extraction efficiency is found in the current invention, compared with centrifugal equipment and a ten-to-hundredfold increase is found compared with conventional equipment.
An additional benefit of the invention is that a factor ten lower volume fraction is found for the dispersed phase when the material for separation is a gas. This makes one embodiment of the current invention suited for the safe use of hazardous/explosive gas mixtures in reactive processes. The small gas volume greatly reduces the impact of a calamity and the small disc spacing thwarts detonation of the gas mixture.
An important required functionality for a reactor is the possibility to add or remove heat efficiently. In the case of the current invention, the heat transfer rate from the fluids in between the rotor and the stator is extremely high compared to heat transfer rates in conventional equipment, easily up to a factor of one hundred higher, in the range of 20-100 kW/m2/s. The stator may contain channels, where cooling liquid flows, which allows for heat transfer, these channels are shown in
The invention can also be applied as a slurry reactor, i.e. a reactor in which a fluid contains the reactants and in addition particles that are dispersed and catalyze the reaction heterogeneously. A schematic drawing of the spinning disc slurry reactor is given in
According to a further embodiment of the invention, a gas feed is provided as a reactant or for stripping a product. The slurry step can be repeated several times in a multiple spinning disc configuration disposed on a single rotating axis that will mimic plug flow behavior. The plug flow behavior gives higher conversion and also a higher selectivity in case of serial reactions. The seal between repeating stages is a gas bubble. A gas can be optionally added at each stage. The gas seal can also be a lighter liquid seal, with optional lighter liquid addition. According to a further embodiment of the invention, a multistage Spinning Disc Slurry Reactor is shown in
Usually noble metal catalyst particles of 2 to 20 nm are present on catalyst support particles of carbon or alumina of 2×10−6 to 50×10−6 m. The reactions are usually fast and require small support particles to prevent diffusion limitations. In the Spinning Disc Slurry Reactor the noble metal particles are freely moving in the liquid and have a good accessibility. The mass transfer coefficient is a million to a hundred million times larger than for the conventional catalyst, ideal for extremely fast reactions. The high heat of reaction that usually accompanies extremely fast reactions is efficiently removed in the apparatus because of the high heat transfer rates that can be achieved, as explained earlier.
The invention can be used as reactor for processes that are sensitive to mixing on a micro scale, like crystallization, polymerization and consecutive and/or parallel competing reactions. The crystal size distribution, molecular weight and/or selectivity and yield of desired reaction products are sensitive for the mixing intensity at this scale. Micromixing times in the range of 10−3 to 10−6 seconds have been realized with rotation speeds up to 2000 rotations per minute and gap distances down to 0.5 mm. Lower mixing times of 10−7 seconds are realizable in this case but are rarely required in known reactive systems.
In a further embodiment of the invention, a countercurrent multiphase contacting device is provided, which integrates a centrifugal separation and countercurrent mass transfer step. This integration gives an increase in process efficiency and smaller process equipment, a factor 10 to 100 smaller than conventional equipment and a factor 2 to 50 smaller for existing centrifugal equipment. According to one embodiment of the invention, typical micro mixing times are 10−3˜10−6 seconds. The reduction in equipment size allows for the process to operate safely and cost effectively at extreme temperatures and pressures. Exotic materials, coatings, and material production/construction processes can be employed without leading to excessive equipment costs.
The present invention has now been described in accordance with several exemplary embodiments, which are intended to be illustrative in all aspects, rather than restrictive. Thus, the present invention is capable of many variations in detailed implementation, which may be derived from the description contained herein by a person of ordinary skill in the art. For example, the embodiment of the invention as described in
All such variations are considered to be within the scope and spirit of the present invention as defined by the following claims and their legal equivalents.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP12/57934 | 4/30/2012 | WO | 00 | 10/25/2013 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61518177 | May 2011 | US |