The present invention is about a petroleum coke extraction system from the coking chambers through draining steel belt conveyors.
At the present time, in some plants, the petroleum coke produced at the refineries is extracted from the coking towers through a wet process which utilizes the water as a transport fluid. A brief description of the current process will better explain this procedure.
The coke is produced in appropriate cylindrical reactors wherein, because of the temperature, thermal cracking reactions occur, from which the production of light hydrocarbons (gasoline, gas oil, oil, and gas) and coke are obtained. The light hydrocarbons in the gas form are stripped from the top of the reaction chamber while the coke, which is a byproduct of the process, remains inside the chamber packing from the bottom upwards. As this phase comes to an end, the coke extraction from the reaction chamber follows. First of all, it is necessary to cool the coke with water by gradually filling up the entire chamber thus flooding all the material inside of it. Once the filling up phase is over, the extraction phase begins, which is of greater interest for the simplifications that this invention is attempting to obtain.
After the opening of the chamber the water cutting phase takes place by removing the flange from its lower part. From the top of the chamber a high pressure water drill equipped with lateral and vertical nozzles is introduced. During a first step, the enlargement of the central hole is provided with the use of the vertical nozzles. In the following step, the coke is gradually cut from the top downwards by using the lateral nozzles and thanks to the previously made hole the coke can run down towards the bottom and come out of the chamber. The cutting or decoking phase is a delicate one, because an excessive speed could cause a vast fall of material which could flood the crusher below thus creating some bridges above the same crusher. The latter one is usually a two rollers crusher. The cutting water flow rate is about 200 m3/h at 180-200 bars.
The water/coke mixture coming from the coking chamber falls towards the bottom and is discharged onto a crusher which sees to reduce the coke at such a size so as to be hydraulically transported through pumps. The connection of the crusher to the coking chambers is made of telescopic cylinders which have the function of holding said mixture in order to avoid the spreading of the material in the surrounding areas.
Below the crusher there is a chute which conveys all the mixture towards a collecting basin from which the mixture on its turn is pumped toward some big containment towers named “hydrobins” that have the function of separating the solid part of the coke from the water.
After this separation the coke is extracted from the hydrobins through rubber belts and stored at the coal store-yard from which is collected afterwards in order to be used in the thermal power plant.
Today these processes have several negative aspects related to:
The object of the present invention is that of remedying to the inconveniences belonging to the known state of the art.
Therefore the invention's object is that of radically modifying the full process through the elimination of all the previously mentioned negative aspects.
It must be said that some of the processes, as it will be clear afterwards, are worthy even if taken apart from their integration into the petroleum coke extraction and transport process from the coking towers. The new extraction process and the following transport is achieved by a draining belt, which complies at the same time with the functions of extraction and water drainage of the water/coke mixture discharged from the coking towers, and hence it substitutes the hydraulic transport phase and the following coke/water separation phase in the hydrobins.
A brief description of the proposed process will allow to better understand the advantages it offers. Said process regards only the coking towers' downstream part of the plant, and therefore does not include the process inside the very own tower.
In the following description a preferred embodiment of the invention's annexed drawings wherein:
Hence, below the coking tower, in place of the hopper and the crusher moving on a rail, a pre-crusher is placed, it too sliding on a rail, and underneath there is a belt which both are set at work when the decoking phase of anyone of the towers is carried out.
The innovative equipment forming the new process is highlighted in
In
Referring to
The belt conveyor of
Such nozzles are needed for coke's fines removal which might get deposited on the surface. For such reason some scrapers 27 and 28 are also provided both on the traction drum 26 and on the tensioning drum 22, respectively. Said scrapers are provided for the material's removal. Another measure used to avoid the accumulation of material on the belt conveyor's rollers is the anti-adherent coating of the bearing rollers and those of the return stretch. The traction drum as well is coated with anti-adherent material in order to avoid the build up of material and to increase the coefficient of friction between the drum and the stainless steel net which forms the driving structure of the belt conveyor. Another device which is part of the belt conveyor is the hydraulic tensioning system 29.
The advantages that are achieved thanks to this innovative process system are:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2002A0030 | Jan 2002 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP03/00103 | 1/6/2003 | WO | 00 | 1/21/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/057604 | 7/17/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3912091 | Thompson | Oct 1975 | A |
4604019 | Deering | Aug 1986 | A |
6290494 | Barkdoll | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6565714 | Lah | May 2003 | B2 |
7108793 | Casey et al. | Sep 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050126902 A1 | Jun 2005 | US |