The present invention relates to a device for supply of at least one reactant liquid, especially of a nonvolatile reactant liquid, to a plurality of mixing points or a plurality of reactors. The mixing points or the reactors form part of an arrangement which is used preferably in laboratory operation for high-throughput analysis of solid catalysts or for optimization of process conditions in high-throughput operation. High-throughput research serves to accelerate research and development processes, in order to reduce the duration of new development of a product or of a process before introduction to the market.
In this context, WO 2010/003661 A1 discloses, in general terms, the regulation of the fluid flows of individual capillaries or groups of capillaries in such apparatuses for high-throughput research.
One of the problems underlying the present invention is that of reducing the range of variation of mass balances in the catalytic conversion of reactant liquids, especially of nonvolatile reactant liquids, and of contributing to an improvement in the measurement data quality. A further problem is that of optimizing arrangements for high-throughput research such that they are better suited to prolonged operation.
The problem addressed by the invention and further problems are solved by providing a device for essentially simultaneous supply of at least one reactant liquid, especially of at least one nonvolatile reactant liquid, to a plurality of mixing points or to a plurality of reactors arranged in parallel in a catalysis apparatus. This device has at least: a reservoir vessel for at least one reactant liquid, especially for at least one nonvolatile reactant liquid; at least one feed line; at least one splitter (distributor) and a group of downstream lines (i.e. downstream of the distributor/splitter), wherein each downstream line in the group of downstream lines is functionally connected to one restrictor element, and the entirety of the restrictor elements and at least parts of the downstream lines is/are in contact, preferably in direct physical contact, with a body having a density of >1 g/cm3 and a heat capacity of >100 J/kg·K.
Preferably, this body having a density of >1 g/cm3 and a heat capacity of >100 J/kg·K has a metal core in which there is elevated conduction of heat. Preference is given here to aluminum or steel. In this context, the storage capacity of said body for heat has a favorable effect on the efficacy of the restrictors. The body or the metal core is preferably surrounded by a heat-insulating layer. The restrictor elements are preferably within a gap between the metal core and insulating sheath.
In a preferred embodiment, the restrictor elements are capillary restrictors. The capillary restrictors and parts of the downstream lines which are in (direct physical) contact with the body having a density of >1 g/cm3 and having a heat capacity of >100 J/kg·K are preferably heated with the temperature control unit to a temperature within a range from 30° C. to 200° C. Preferably, the temperature is within a range from 50° C. to 180° C. and further preferably within a range from 60° C. to 160° C.
Preferably, in the context of the present invention, the body having a density of >1 g/cm3 and a heat capacity of >100 J/kg·K has a high constancy of temperature, with deviations in the temperature preferably not greater than ±1 K per meter of length of restrictor, preferably capillary restrictor. Further preferably, the deviation is not greater than ±0.5 K per meter of length. The temperatures of adjacent restrictors should preferably not differ by more than 0.5 K, in order to achieve maximum equality of distribution of fluid streams. As has been found, such constancy of temperature is particularly advantageous especially for nonvolatile reactant liquids. Further preferably, the temperature difference should be equal to or less than 0.3 K. Even further preferably, the temperature difference should be equal to or less than 0.1 K. It has been found that, surprisingly, the inventive body having the comparatively high density and heat capacity has a great influence on the improvement of process control and the associated measurement data quality. This is especially true compared to an arrangement in which the temperature of the restrictors is controlled only or primarily via air circulation.
In a preferred embodiment, the inventive device is incorporated into an apparatus for high-throughput research, preferably for catalyst testing, with each individual downstream line connected either to one mixing point or to one reactor inlet. Each individual mixing point preferably has a fluid supply for gaseous components. The mixing point serves to mix or to combine a reactant liquid, especially a nonvolatile reactant liquid, with one or more gaseous components.
It is preferably a characteristic feature of nonvolatile liquids in the context of the present invention that at least 50% by weight, preferably more than 70% by weight and further preferably more than 90% by weight of liquid has a boiling point greater than 350° C. at standard pressure.
The fluid combined in the individual mixing points is preferably passed in each case to a reactor. Alternatively, the reactant liquid, preferably nonvolatile reactant liquid, can also be conveyed proceeding from the respective line downstream of the splitter/distributor directly into a reactor. If reactant liquid, preferably nonvolatile reactant liquid, is conveyed directly to the individual reactors by means of the individual downstream lines, it is possible that the reactant liquid, preferably the nonvolatile reactant liquid, is mixed with gaseous fluid at the reactor inlet or in the region of the reactor inlet.
The present invention also relates to a process for essentially simultaneous supply of at least one reactant liquid, especially a nonvolatile reactant liquid, to a plurality of mixing points or to a plurality of reactors, using an inventive device.
In a preferred embodiment, at least part of the inventive device for the supply of at least one reactant liquid, preferably at least one nonvolatile reactant liquid, is disposed in an air circulation oven or in an oven chamber.
With regard to the dimensions of the oven chambers, it is preferable that the dimensions of the oven chambers are configured according to factors including how many downstream lines are in (physical) contact with an inventive body having a density of >1 g/cm3 and a (specific) heat capacity of >100 J/kg·K, and what dimensions the individual restrictor elements have.
Such an inventive body preferably is in contact, preferably in direct physical contact, with at least four or more downstream lines having restrictor elements, preferably with six or more downstream lines having restrictor elements, further preferably with between ten and one hundred downstream lines having restrictor elements.
Such an inventive body in contact with twenty downstream lines having restrictor elements can preferably be disposed in an oven chamber, the internal volume of which is in the range from 0.5 to 150 I. Preferably, the internal volume of one oven chamber is in the range from 0.7 to 50 I; further preferably, the internal volume of one oven chamber is in the range from 0.9 to 10 I.
With regard to the capillary restrictors disposed in the downstream lines, it is preferable that these have steel as a material, preferably as the predominant material, and further preferably consist essentially of steel. The length of the capillary restrictors is preferably within a range from 0.2 m to 6 m, more preferably within a range from 0.5 m to 3 m. The internal diameter of the individual capillary restrictors is preferably within a range from 50 to 750 μm, preference being given to an internal diameter within a range from 100 μm to 500 μm. The ratio of the cross-sectional area of the downstream line (QFU) to the cross-sectional area of the capillary restrictors (QKR), i.e. QFU/QKR, is preferably ≧3, and further preferably QFU/QKR≧5.
Especially if the capillary restrictors have a length of more than 0.3 m, these capillary restrictors are wound around a core of the inventive body or fitted into a spiral mold. In this case, the core and/or the spiral mold is a body having heat capacity in the context of the present invention.
The inventive device for supply of at least one reactant liquid, especially of a nonvolatile reactant liquid, is preferably operated in conjunction with a catalysis apparatus in order to introduce said reactant liquid essentially simultaneously over a long period with high accuracy and higher reproducibility in reactors connected in parallel in a catalysis apparatus. The product streams generated in the reactors are subjected to one or several analyses in order to determine the efficacy of the catalysts and/or the optimal process conditions as a function of the objective of the analysis.
The preferred field of use of the inventive device relates to catalytic studies which are conducted at a liquid hourly space velocity (LHSV) in the range from 0.05 to 10 h−1, further preference being given to an LHSV of 0.2 to 3 h−1. Accordingly, the device is preferably used in conjunction with reactors having an internal volume in the range from 0.2 ml to 100 ml. The rectors preferably have an internal volume of 0.5 ml to 50 ml.
In a preferred embodiment, the reservoir vessel for the at least one reactant liquid, especially nonvolatile reactant liquid, is equipped with a stirrer element and has a separate heating device. The reactant liquid, especially the nonvolatile reactant liquid, is transferred from the reservoir vessel to the splitter and through the restrictor elements preferably by means of pressurization, and further preferably using a pump. The pump may be selected from the group of metering pumps, HPLC pumps. It is possible to meter the reactant liquid, especially nonvolatile reactant liquid, into reactors whose internal reactor pressure is in the range from 1 to 250 bar, the internal reactor pressure further preferably being within a range from 2 to 180 bar.
The term “reactant liquid” in the context of the present invention refers to substances which are present in the form of liquids and can enter into a chemical reaction. The reactant liquids are preferably nonvolatile reactant liquids. More particularly, the nonvolatile reactant liquids are selected from the group of oils, heavy oils, waxes, VGO (vacuum gas oil) and mixtures thereof. They are preferably hydrocarbonaceous compounds which may also comprise nitrogen- and sulfur-containing components. In the context of the present invention, it is possible that the nonvolatile reactant liquids are present as solids at room temperature. It is preferably a characteristic feature of nonvolatile liquids in the context of the present invention that at least 50% by weight, preferably more than 70% by weight and further preferably more than 90% by weight of the liquid has a boiling point greater than 350° C. (in each case at standard pressure).
If the nonvolatile reactant liquids to be examined comprise solid particles in the form of deposits or coke, these deposits are preferably removed by a filtration step. The capillary elements of a microscale metering device, because of the small dimensions, can be blocked by solid particles, which leads to impairment of function. Solid particles having a size in the region of about 1 μm generally cannot be removed by the filtration operation. In this respect, it is not advisable for such reactant liquids (comprising particles) to select too small a capillary diameter. At the same time, it is advantageous to select the capillaries with maximum length and to contact them with the inventive body.
The diameter of the restriction capillaries is thus, in a preferred embodiment, determined by the size of solid particles, in which case the diameter of the capillaries should preferably be at least ten times greater than the diameter of the smallest non-removable solid particles, i.e. at least ten times greater than 1 μm, i.e. greater than 10 μm.
The term “gaseous fluid” comprises fluids which are in the gaseous state under reaction conditions. These may either be reactant components which take part in the reaction or inert gas components which serve as a carrier gas or calibration gas standard.
The term “high-throughput research” in the context of the present invention refers particularly to catalyst test benches having a plurality or a multitude of reactors arranged in parallel in the dimensions of what are called bench-scale plants. This area of plant construction differs from the area of microscale reactor technology in that, in the system construction of present relevance, preferably no components having dimensions below 1 mm are used.
Microscale reactor technology is based on the use of components having very small dimensions. The lines and channels have dimensions in the sub-millimeter range. The sample amounts used of solid catalysts to be examined are within a range below 100 mg. The more complex the chemical reactions to be evaluated by means of the catalytic experiments, the more critical is the use of microscale reactor technology. In many cases, it is impossible to obtain meaningful and robust data.
The present invention also relates to the combination of components from the field of microscale reaction technology—in the form of the inventive device—with pilot plants or bench-scale plants, which are equipped with individual, mutually independent reactors. The success of this combination is apparent from the data quality, which is expressed by the mass balances or material recovery rate, and which has been crucially improved by means of the present device.
On the basis of the present invention, it is possible to distinctly improve the data quality of catalysis data which are obtained by means of bench-scale plants or laboratory pilot plants. As a result of the higher data quality, the number of costly catalytic studies on a larger scale in large pilot plants can be greatly reduced. Overall, it is possible to accelerate research operations, or to greatly restrict energy consumption in experiments on the large scale.
More particularly, in the area of nonvolatile reactant liquids, the inventive device is of great significance.
With reference to
The present invention also relates to a combination of an inventive device for parallel metered addition of liquids with a catalysis apparatus having reactors arranged in parallel, the reactors preferably being of the size of conventional laboratory reactors, or else taking the form of reactors in a small pilot plant.
This shows that the viscosity of methane within the range from 300 to 400 K rises from about 11 to 15 μPas. Within the same temperature range, the viscosity of the liquid falls from 1500 to 500 μPas, meaning that the viscosity of the liquid decreases by about a factor of 3. The temperature-dependent profile also shows that the decrease in viscosity in the range between 270 and 300 K is within the same order of magnitude as in the range between 300 and 400 K. This greatly temperature-dependent range of viscosity is referred to as the “structurally viscous range”. Within this highly temperature-dependent range, homogeneous temperature control is of even greater significance than in the less significantly temperature-dependent viscosity ranges. In these highly temperature-dependent ranges, the inventive unit can be used particularly advantageously.
In the embodiment of
In an alternative embodiment, the housing half-shells are replaced by a tube slotted on one side. Otherwise, preferably a gap in the range from 1 to 3 mm is present between the half-shells. This gap serves for passage of the ends of the capillary lines.
In a preferred embodiment, the temperature of the capillary device shown in
The examples adduced relate to the supply and conversion of nonvolatile reactant liquids in a high-throughput apparatus with sixteen reactors arranged in parallel, and serve to illustrate the invention. The reactions selected here were hydrocracking reactions.
In accordance with the illustrative embodiment, the nonvolatile reactant liquid used was a crude feed which was obtained as a residue in an atmospheric distillation. The melting point of the crude feed was 86° C. and the boiling point was 370° C. The crude feed was converted in the presence of hydrogen in a trickle bed process, using nitrogen as the carrier gas. The sixteen reactors were each charged with 10 ml of solid catalyst. The reactant liquid was supplied to the individual reactors with an LHSV of 1.5 h−1.
The amount of liquid product which had been accommodated in the separators downstream of the reactors over a given period was recorded gravimetrically. The product composition was determined by means of gas chromatography.
An experimental setup in which the inlet for liquid reactant was divided by means of a splitter into downstream lines provided with restrictor elements was used, using a setup analogous in principle to that from the PCT application WO 2005/063372. However, the inventive device was used in addition.
In the comparative example, the restrictor elements and parts of the downstream lines were accommodated directly in an air circulation oven chamber without the inventive body. Nonvolatile reactant liquid was introduced simultaneously into sixteen reactors and the product stream obtained in the individual reactors was characterized analytically in order to determine the mass balance, with variation of the temperature of the air circulation oven chambers. The temperatures selected here for the air circulation oven chambers for heating of the restrictor elements were 88° C., 90° C. and 92° C. The start temperature was 25° C.
The mass balances which were determined after the supply of reactant liquid at different temperatures of the air circulation chambers are shown in
In inventive example 1, the studies of reactant liquid supply were conducted in an inventive device, which was otherwise accommodated in the same air circulation oven chamber as in the comparative example. The restrictor elements consisted of stainless steel capillaries having a length of 1.5 m and had an internal diameter of 150 μm. The restrictor elements were wound around a metal core and sheathed by silicone heating mats. Three thermocouples for temperature monitoring were provided in the sheath. The temperature of the sheathed restrictor elements was regulated with a digital regulator.
The results show that the range of variation in the mass balance is distinctly reduced using the inventive device compared to the prior art. According to the prior art, the range of variation in the mass balances is approximately within the range of ±3%. Using the inventive device, the range of variation of the mass balances, in contrast, is within a range less than or equal to ±1.5%.
In addition, long-term studies were conducted, in which the reactant liquid was conveyed into the reactors of the catalysis apparatus over a period of seven weeks. The mass balances determined here show that a very low range of variation is present by means of the inventive device.
The result of the studies is shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 102 361.9 | May 2011 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/059553 | 5/23/2012 | WO | 00 | 11/22/2013 |