The field of the invention relates to the separation of hydrocarbons. Specifically, the invention relates to improving the energy usage for the separation of hydrocarbon components that have similar boiling points through distillation.
The separation of hydrocarbons is a basic process in the petroleum industry. Petroleum is a mixture of many hydrocarbon compounds and the compounds are separated and used for different purposes, such as fuel, lubricants, feedstock to polymer plants, etc. One method of separation in the petroleum industry is distillation. Distillation is a method of separation that is based on a difference in the relative volatilities of the components in a mixture, and therefore differences in the composition between a liquid mixture and a vapor formed from the liquid mixture. In a standard continuous distillation process involving multiple stages, the differences in composition allows for partial separation at each stage. The liquid and vapor phases are passed to different stages, and further produce new liquid and vapor phases in each having different compositions. The standard distillation system comprises a tall column wherein vapor flows upward and contacts a liquid flowing downward. The vapor phase is formed by adding substantial heat to boil, or vaporize, the liquid when it reaches the bottom of the column, and vapor is condensed when it leaves the top of the column. The process expends a lot of energy to continuously process a stream of hydrocarbons, and frequently, multiple columns are used to separate a feedstream into multiple product streams.
A problem exists for distillation systems in that they are large consumers of energy and inefficient with respect to energy usage and consumption. Improvements in design can significantly reduce energy consumption. With increasing energy costs and with increasing pressures to reduce CO2 emissions associated with energy consumption, there is a compelling need for more efficient distillation designs.
Energy efficiency is important for processes that are energy intensive. The separation of hydrocarbon compounds with distillation is energy intensive, and with close boiling point components the amount of energy can be significant. The present invention provides for the separation of hydrocarbons that improves the energy efficiency. The invention is a process for the separation of a light component from a hydrocarbon mixture. A hydrocarbon feedstream is passed to a distillation column at a position between the rectifying section and the stripping section, and where the feedstream comprises a mixture that has less than 50% light components. The distillation column has an overhead vapor stream which is passed to a first heat pump compressor, creating a compressed overhead vapor stream. The compressed overhead vapor stream is passed to the vapor side of a first reboiler heat exchanger. The compressed overhead vapor stream is at least partially condensed. The distillation column has a bottoms stream, and a first portion of the bottoms stream is passed to the liquid side of the first reboiler heat exchanger, and at least partially vaporized. The vapor is returned to the distillation column. The invention further includes drawing off a side vapor stream from the rectifying section at a draw off port, thereby creating a side draw stream. The side draw stream is passed to a second heat pump compressor, creating a compressed side draw stream. The compressed side draw stream is passed to the vapor side of a second reboiler heat exchanger, creating a cooled side draw stream. A second portion of the bottoms stream is passed to the liquid side of the second reboiler heat exchanger, where the second portion is at least partially vaporized. The vapor from the second portion of the second heat exchanger is returned to the distillation column, and the cooled side draw stream is returned to the rectifying section of the distillation column.
In one embodiment, the side draw stream is taken from the lower half of the rectifying section of the distillation column.
Additional objects, embodiments and details of this invention can be obtained from the following drawing and detailed description of the invention.
One of the problems with the separation of hydrocarbon compounds is that compounds having close boiling points are highly energy intensive. Distillation is one of the most common methods for the separation of hydrocarbon liquids into separate components. This usually is for liquids having a more narrow composition, but is also used for producing relatively pure individual components. Distillation is also very energy intensive, and involves billions of dollars of fuel costs each year. Heat pumps, or mechanical vapor recompression, can be used to reduce these energy costs. Heat pumps make efficient use of energy through mechanical recompression of vapor, and the heat transfer of the energy in the vapor to another fluid. This is a means of transferring thermal energy from the compressed vapor to a liquid, wherein the liquid is boiled and the compressed vapor is partially or wholly condensed. This is particularly true for the separation of close boiling point components in a hydrocarbon mixture. Any improvements to reduce the energy intensity can significantly affect the economics of the production of many hydrocarbon compounds.
The present invention is aimed at the separation of a light component from a mixture of hydrocarbons. In the case where the feed comprises less than 50%, by weight, of light components, the overhead vapor stream can be used to transfer heat to the reboiler alone. However, by taking a side draw stream, there is a lower compression ratio, and therefore less mechanical energy to boost the side draw to the second reboiler temperature, thereby improving the efficiency of the column. The
The overhead vapor stream 28 is passed to a first heat pump compressor 40, to create a compressed overhead vapor stream 42. The compressed overhead vapor stream is passed to the vapor side of a first reboiler heat exchanger 44, wherein the compressed overhead vapor stream is cooled and at least partially condensed 46. Preferably, the process is operated to completely condense the compressed overhead vapor stream. A portion of the condensed, compressed overhead vapor stream is passed back to the top of the rectifying section as reflux. A first portion of the bottoms liquid stream 32 is passed to the liquid side of the first reboiler heat exchanger 44. The first portion 32 is vaporized to a vapor stream 34 and passed back to the bottom of the stripping section 26 of the distillation column 20. A portion 48 of the condensed overhead stream 46 is passed to the top of the rectifying section 24 as reflux for the distillation process.
The process further includes drawing off a vapor side stream from the rectifying section 24, thereby creating a side draw stream 52, taken from a draw off port 53. The side draw stream 52 is compressed in a second heat pump compressor 50, to create a compressed side draw stream 54. The compressed side draw stream 54 is passed to the vapor side of a second reboiler heat exchanger 60, generating a cooled compressed side draw stream 56. The cooled side draw stream 56 is passed back to the rectifying section 24 of the distillation column 20. The cooled compressed side draw stream 56 can be either partially or wholly condensed. In one embodiment, the cooled side draw stream is passed back to the rectifying section, in a position near the draw off port 53. In one embodiment, the cooled and at least partially condensed side draw stream 56 is passed to a position in the rectifying section 24 below the draw off port 53.
A second portion 36 of the bottoms liquid stream is passed to the liquid side of the second reboiler heat exchanger 60. The second portion 36 is heated to a vapor phase 38 and passed to the bottom of the stripping section 26 of the distillation column 10.
The preferred position of the draw off port 53 is at a tray positioned within 10 trays of the tray having a relatively large temperature gradient in the rectifying section 24. A temperature gradient curve is shown in
The flow of vapor to the reboilers would put the energy from the vapor into the reboilers. The flowscheme would split the vapor draws, and send some from a side draw. The side draw would have a smaller compression ratio requirement, and therefore would have some savings over just the compression of the rectifying overhead vapor compression.
Simulations were run using the thermodynamic data for propane and propylene. The feed comprised approximately 35% propylene, with a nominal operating pressure of 170 psia (1172 kPa). The temperature of the feed at the inlet to the distillation column was 87° F. (30.6° C.). The feed tray was stage 114, or theoretical tray 114, for a column of 160 trays, with the first tray being the top most tray. The rectifying section 24 included trays 1 to 113, and the stripping section 26 included trays 115 to 160. The terms tray and theoretical stage are interchangeable for purposes of this discussion with respect to a distillation column.
A distillation column has a temperature gradient along the height of the column, which can be seen in
The enthalpy deficit can be plotted against the stage position in the distillation column, as shown in
Further simulations were performed for several columns having different stages for a typical commercial operation in the production of propylene. The simulations are for a commercial plant that produces 500 kMTA. The separation of propylene from propane is very energy intensive, and adding equipment can be readily offset by the savings in energy costs. The results for the simulation with a 160 theoretical stage column is shown in the following table. The base case is a standard set up without a side draw or the heat pump reboiler, and the case with a heat pump reboiler, or interstage reboiler.
The simulations indicate a significant operating savings, with a payback on the order of 13 months. These simulations are all for the same product purity, with a propylene product stream having a 99.5% purity. The energy savings increases with increased product purity.
While the invention has been described with what are presently considered the preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments, but it is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/359,869 filed Jun. 30, 2010.
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 61359869 | Jun 2010 | US |