The invention relates to a gasification reactor for producing crude gas containing CO or H2, of the type indicated in the preamble of claim 1.
Such a gasification reactor is known, for example, from WO 2009/036985 A1 by the applicant, whereby a wealth of prior art is cited in this document, such as U.S. Pat. No. 4,474,584, for example, that in particular addresses the cooling of hot synthesis gas. DE 35 30 918 C3, DE 691 02 878 T2 and EP 0 046 600 B1 are also cited as prior art.
In particular, the invention concerns itself with problems that occur in such reactors, whereby the invention is not restricted to the gasification reactor that is specifically addressed here; it is also directed at apparatuses in which problems described in greater detail below can occur.
Such an apparatus must be suitable to enable methods of pressure gasification/burning of finely distributed fuels, which includes the partial oxidation of the fuels coal dust, finely distributed biomass, oil, tars, or the like in a reactor. This also includes the separate or joint withdrawal of slag or fly ash, and generated synthesis gas or flue gas. Cooling of the reaction products (gas and slag/fly ash) must be enabled, for example by spray quenching, gas quenching, radiation quenching, convective heating surfaces, or the like, depending on the type of method used, whereby finally, attention also has to be directed towards discharge of the reaction products from the pressure container.
The task of the present invention consists in particular of providing a cooling shield within the pressure container, having conical regions for the exit of gas or slag, wherein the suspension or connection between cooling shield and pressure container (load removal) is optimized, while avoiding difference expansions.
This task is accomplished, according to the invention, in that for removal of the load on the membrane wall, support takes place directly or indirectly at the coolant inlet lines or mixture outlet lines, wherein it is practical if the coolant inlet lines and/or the mixture outlet lines are positioned in the neutral plane defined by the burners, for example, and pass through the pressure container there.
By means of the invention, the problem is solved, among other things, of creating a fixed-point plane in the perpendicular line to the container plane, between the pressure container and the inner structures, so that the expansions arising from the extreme temperature differences are absorbed, since there are no or only slight expansion differences in the fixed-point plane. Relative to the pressure container wall, the membrane wall is gas-tight. In contrast, the floor and the cover of such a membrane wall cage have outlets, depending on the design, to allow gas, slag, water, etc. to flow in or out.
By means of the invention, it is clearly possible to pass burners, for example, through the pressure container and the cooling shield during gasification, pressurized pulverized coal combustion, or the like, without having to accept expansions in this connection.
The initially cited problems are partially addressed in EP 0 616 022 B1. Use in a gasification reactor and directly following convective heating surfaces is described here. Here as well, a membrane wall construction is shown that is enclosed on the outside by a pressure container. Here, the load is conducted away from the membrane walls, into the pressure container, by way of separate components. These components are equipped with their own circuits that heat the components. However, this design has the disadvantage that additional circuits beyond the existing ones for the membrane wall must be used, which requires additional space and is extremely complicated.
It is provided, in an embodiment of the invention, that pipes of the membrane wall are fastened to a ring distributor arranged below and/or above the heating surfaces, wherein the ring distributor is connected to the coolant inlet lines or mixture outlet lines.
Fundamentally, the wall designs of the reaction chamber can be configured in different ways; for example, the invention provides a gasification reactor having a membrane wall cage, and having top and bottom conical regions formed by cooling pipes, which membrane wall cage is characterized in that the conical membrane cage regions are equipped with separate cooling water inflows and outflows, wherein a part of the pipes forming the vertical membrane wall are designed as a support element for the pipes forming the bottom or top cone.
It can be seen that a particular feature of this embodiment is that at least a part of the pipes that form the substantially cylindrical membrane wall and through which coolant flows simultaneously bear the bottom membrane cage region by means of support, and the top membrane cage by means of suspension.
In this connection, in an embodiment of this solution, it can be provided that the pipes forming the support elements run out of the respective ring distributor below or above the respective cone and back into the membrane wall, whereby because the pipes forming the support elements are guided out of a different plane of the ring distributor, they always have the optimum angular positions to receive the load of the supported or suspended membrane wall cage region.
In another embodiment of the invention, it is provided, in particular when the membrane is formed from continuous pipes that form both the top and bottom conical region, that brackets are provided in the annular space at the membrane wall pipes, which brackets support themselves on the coolant inlet lines or mixture outlet lines, wherein it can also be provided that the membrane wall and the top and bottom conical region are formed by the same coolant-conducting pipes, wherein regions of the corresponding pipe segments are arranged offset or shifted from one another to form the respective cone, whereby the cone formation can be optimized using simple means.
Further details, features and advantages of the invention are evident from the following description and the drawing. This shows, in:
The gasification reactor shown in
Following the transition region 8 is a quench chamber or quench channel 11, followed by a slag collection container 12 in a water bath 13.
In the following, the embodiment of the membrane wall 3 enclosing the reaction chamber 4 will be described, in particular.
In the exemplary embodiment according to
Any elements passing through the wall of the pressure container 2 and membrane wall 3, such as burners or the like, are merely indicated in
The inlets and outlets, respectively, of the coolant inlet lines 5 and mixture outlet lines 14, respectively, pass through the pressure container wall 2 within this plane 18, or as close as possible to the plane 18, and the geometric assignment is identified with “x” in
The exemplary embodiment according to
A solution is indicated in
The design can also apply analogously to the top cone 3″, which is not shown in any greater detail in the figures.
A highly significant feature of the invention is that for removal of the load on the membrane wall 3, the coolant inlet lines 5 or mixture outlet lines 14 are used directly, which is shown in different variants in
To support the bottom conical region 3′, part of the pipes forming the cylindrical membrane wall 3 are guided out of the plane, bent approximately in the shape of an angle, and into the bottom ring distributor 15, wherein the greater part of the pipes of the vertical membrane wall 3 end in this ring distributor, without a bend. The ring distributor 15 itself is borne by a plurality of coolant inlet lines 5, whereby the overall structure is correspondingly held.
The inlet or outlet of the corresponding lines 5 or 14, respectively, should be positioned in or close to the neutral plane 18 drawn with a broken line, in order to avoid or absorb difference expansions.
A modified example is shown in
Finally,
Of course, the exemplary embodiments of the invention that are described can be modified in many ways, without departing from the basic idea. For example, mixed forms of support can also be provided, such as supports of the bottom membrane wall cage region 3′ on bent coolant lines, on the one hand, and possibly additional supports 19 and 20, for example as a combination of the embodiments in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2009 034 867.0 | Jul 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2010/004340 | 7/16/2010 | WO | 00 | 1/17/2012 |