The invention relates to methods for more efficiently carrying out various high pressure operations or operating with high pressure liquids, such as those involving pressure precipitation, controlling high temperature operations as by cooling high pressure liquid streams and efficient supply and use of liquids in subterranean spaces.
With the cost of power for driving pumps to pressurize liquids steadily increasing throughout the world, it has been important to investigate whether methods of operation involve high pressure liquids can be more efficiently performed to conserve such costly electrical energy. It has been found that there are a number of operations which involve the use of high pressure liquids that can be significantly modified to allow them to operate more efficiently.
It has been found that, by carefully conserving the high pressure energy present in high pressure liquids, there are a variety of methods and/or processes involving such liquids that can be more efficiently performed. The key to such conservation is found to lie in the employment of energy recovery devices that are capable of transferring high pressure from one liquid stream to another without dissipating the pressure of the high pressure stream.
In one particular aspect, the invention provides a method for efficiently effecting high pressure precipitation, which method comprises the steps of:
(a) supplying a feedstream having dissolved solutes or colloidal suspensions,
(b) raising the pressure of said feedstream to at least about 500 psi (35 bar),
(c) transferring said high pressure stream of step (b) to a reactor,
(d) treating said high pressure stream in said reactor to cause precipitates to form,
(e) withdrawing a solute-depleted or colloidal suspension depleted stream from said reactor while maintaining the high pressure therein by exchanging said high-pressure of said stream being removed with the feedstream being supplied in step (a) to accomplish a major part of said pressurizing of step (b) and
(f) separating said precipitates from said high pressure liquid.
In another particular aspect, the invention provides a method of efficiently delivering water to a subterranean mine and retrieving it to the surface, which method comprises the steps of:
providing a source of liquid,
effecting gravity flow of a descending stream of said liquid into a mine requiring cooling at least 1000 feet (305 meters) below,
reducing the pressure of said liquid stream to about atmospheric pressure,
utilizing said atmospheric pressure liquid stream in the mine,
increasing the pressure of the used liquid stream by exchanging its pressure with that of the down-flowing liquid stream, and
returning said repressurized used liquid stream to the surface.
In a further particular aspect, the invention provides a method of efficiently adjusting the temperature of a high pressure stream, which method comprises the steps of:
providing a first stream of high pressure liquid of at least about 500 psi (34 bar), which is desired to be heated or cooled while retaining substantially the same pressure,
flowing said first high-temperature liquid stream through a heat-exchanger designed for low pressure operation where it either (1) rejects heat directly into a cooler fluid in order to cool said first stream and produce a second cooler liquid stream having a temperature at least about 50° F. (10° C.) lower, or (2) absorbs heat from a warmer fluid in order to heat said first stream and produce a second warmer stream having a temperature at least about 50° F. (10° C.) higher,
prior to its entry into the heat-exchanger, exchanging the high pressure of said first liquid stream with the second liquid stream exiting from the heat exchanger to produce a depressurized first liquid stream and a repressurized second liquid stream, and
returning said repressurized second liquid stream to said reactor at about the pressure at which said first stream exited.
It is known that there are a variety of chemical and/or physical processes that operate more efficiently at superatmospheric pressures, for example at pressures at least about 500 psi (35 bar), and particularly at pressures above about 800 psi (55 bar). For purposes of this application, pressures are understood to represent “gauge” pressure, i.e. the amount above atmospheric pressure, unless otherwise indicated. Some of these involve the treatment of proteins, whereas others are concerned with the precipitation of metals from liquid streams containing dissolves solutes or colloidal suspensions. For example, in the field of proteins, there are advantages to treating solutions of insulin and albumin in organic solutions at high pressures, e.g. 1000-2000 psig, to produce desired microparticles. It is also known to treat aqueous solutions of whey at high pressures with carbon dioxide to fractionate the whey proteins and cause their precipitation. There are numerous treatments of solutions of metal ions that can be effectively precipitated under high pressures by treatment with hydrogen and/or sulfur containing gases using techniques which have been generally referred to as pressure precipitation. It is also known to treat colloidal suspensions of ores or other raw materials using acids or the like to cause precipitation of metals under techniques referred to as pressure leaching.
The high pressure liquid stream from the reactor 19 is supplied to an inlet line 27 that enters the right-hand end of an energy recovery unit 29 in
Depicted schematically in
Study of the overall operation shows that effective use of cooling or cleaning liquid in a subterranean space is very economically accomplished through this overall method. Advantage is taken of the gravity flow of surface level liquid down to the operating mine level, where it is most efficiently used to absorb heat from the atmosphere in a low pressure heat exchange device, which is made possible by radically reducing its pressure, or is used for other operational purposes. Importantly, such reduction of pressure to take advantage of low pressure heat exchange devices is done in a manner so as to supply nearly all of the energy needed to return the used liquid stream to the surface as a result of the strategic placement of such an energy recovery device. Because only a minimum amount of energy needs to be expended by the surface pump and the injection pump 63, it can be seen that the overall situation is an extremely favorable one, particularly when an energy recovery unit that requires no auxiliary power train is utilized. For example, very effective cooling of a subterranean installation is provided merely by supplying the cool stream of liquid through the entry point at ground surface level and driving the surface pump 45 to supply about 1% of the pressure head necessary to return the stream to the surface.
In the energy recovery unit 81, the pressure of the now cooled liquid stream is returned to a figure equal to about 97% of the pressure of the original high temperature exit stream 77 from the vessel 71 that entered the inlet conduit 79. The high pressure outlet 91 from the rotary energy recovery unit 81 is connected to a side inlet to the main vessel 71 to return the stream thereto, and a circulation pump 93 is provided in this line 95 to draw the fluid exiting from the energy recovery unit and deliver this return stream to the main vessel, where the returning, cool side stream mixes with the liquid in the vessel and effects the desired temperature control. A small pump 97 is also included to accommodate lubrication leakage from the high pressure side of the unit 81. A high pressure exit stream 99 leaves the vessel 71 at about the desired targeted temperature.
Overall, it can be seen that such an arrangement provides an extremely effective way of economically and efficiently maintaining desired a reaction temperature in a reaction zone or simply drastically reducing the temperature of a product stream while maintaining its high pressure as it is being transferred to a further point in an overall operation. Economy results not only from the ability to utilize low pressure heat exchangers having far less capital cost and greater efficiency of operation, but also through a minimizing of the need for pumping power to effect such desired cooling.
Although the invention has been described with regard to certain preferred embodiments, it should be understood that various changes and modifications, as would be obvious to one having ordinary skill in this art, may be made without departing from the scope of the invention, which is set forth in the claims appended hereto.
This application is a continuation of U.S. Application No. PCT/US2010/027918, filed Mar. 19, 2010, which claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/161,977, filed Mar. 20, 2009, the disclosures of both of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61161977 | Mar 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/US2010/027918 | Mar 2010 | US |
Child | 13237659 | US |