The invention relates to a line element for handling fluids for high-pressure and high-temperature applications with high chemical resistance, in particular for digestion or for synthesis of substances in chemical process engineering, the line element comprising at least one temperature-resistant and pressure-resistant support element that has a first interior in which an inner line made of a plastic material resistant to chemicals is arranged, at least one free end of the line element being provided with a connector element that has a second interior into which the inner line extends.
Line elements are known in chemical process engineering and are used, for example, for transporting a wide variety of fluids, in particular liquids, gases, solids and mixtures thereof, between storage vessels, collection vessels, reactors, cooling or heating elements, etc. These line elements can also be used for carrying out chemical or physical processes with the fluids contained in them, that is to say the line elements can also serve as reaction chambers or analysis chambers, for example in continuous-flow or stopped-flow processes. Chemical processes often involve aggressive substances, so that the line elements used in process engineering have to be resistant to the chemicals used in the respective processes. Chemical processes of this kind are also often carried out at high temperatures and/or high pressures. There is therefore a need for line elements for chemical process engineering which are resistant to a large number of aggressive substances and which can be used at temperatures of 300° C. and more and at pressures of several hundred bar.
A wide variety of line systems for carrying out analysis and synthesis processes at a laboratory scale are described in the prior art. For example, documents U.S. Pat. No. 5,215,715 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,314,664 disclose devices for carrying out chemical reactions by means of microwave heating, in which tube lines are used that are made of fluoroplastics resistant to chemicals. However, plastic tubes of this kind can be used only at very low pressures and low temperatures, well below the temperature and pressure ranges cited above.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,672,316 discloses a microwave-heatable pressure reactor into which a tube element made of a fluoroplastic extends. The interior of the reactor is pressurized by an external gas pressure supply, such that a pressure equilibrium essentially exists between the interior and the tube opening into this interior. The plastic tube system can therefore be used at temperatures of up to 260° C. and at pressures of up to 100 bar. However, the way in which the tube system is supported via the internal pressure in the reactor is complicated because of the required external gas pressure source, and it can accordingly be used only for relatively short line elements. In addition, the application of this technology is limited to processes in which the line element opens with its free end into the interior of the reactor.
European Patent EP-B-0 750 746 describes a device for handling liquids for analytical purposes, in which the lines that are used consist of platinum/iridium capillaries. However, capillaries of this kind are very expensive, and they can also be attacked by substances such as hot aqua regia or by phosphorus corrosion in the incineration of organic substances. Moreover, platinum/iridium capillaries are available only up to a length of 1.5 m. As alternatives to platinum/iridium capillaries, EP-B-0 750 746 also mentions tubes made of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) that are encased by a steel cloth or a high-pressure capillary of special steel. However, in order to attach such lines to the components that are to be connected, metal flanges are used which in many applications are disadvantageous because of their limited resistance to chemicals. Moreover, there are no commercially available lines with which it is possible to obtain capillaries having small internal diameters of less than 3 mm. Moreover, when using inner lines made of fluoroplastics, substances may diffuse through the jacket of the inner tube and into the area between support jacket and inner tube at high temperatures and pressures. This can lead to a collapse of the inner tube, with the result that the tube is partly or even completely occluded.
Therefore, the technical problem addressed by the invention is that of making available a line element for handling fluids which is temperature-resistant and pressure-resistant and is also resistant to a large number of chemicals and can be produced inexpensively in large lengths. The line element according to the invention should in particular be able to be produced as a capillary line with an internal diameter of less than 3 mm.
This technical problem is solved by the line element according to Claim 1. Advantageous developments of the line element according to the invention are the subject of the dependent claims.
The invention accordingly relates to a line element for handling fluids which is of the type described in the introduction and which is characterized in that the support element and/or the connector element has at least one relief opening which ensures a communicating link between the first interior of the support element, or second interior of the connector element), and the environment.
By way of the relief opening provided according to the invention, substances diffusing through the inner line can escape outward from the interspace between the inner line and the support element, with the result that a collapse of the inner line is effectively avoided. Any desired number and size of the relief openings can be chosen, as long as the support function of the support element is not impaired. If so required, the relief openings can also be used for flushing the support element. The line element according to the invention can be produced particularly inexpensively, even in quite considerable lengths, for example of several metres, whereas platinum/iridium capillaries are commercially available only up to a length of 1.5 m. The inner line can be formed on the inside wall of the support element by injection moulding, for example. However, it is particularly cost-effective to mechanically insert a plastic tube serving as inner line into the support element, for example by pushing the tube in, or by blowing the tube in by means of a gas or a liquid. The tube in this case has an external diameter slightly smaller than the internal diameter of the interior of the support element. On the initial application of pressure and/or temperature, the inner line then moulds itself onto the inside wall of the support element. Depending on the material used, the inner line can mould itself permanently onto the support element or can detach itself from the support element again after the pressure has lowered. In the latter case, especially if the inner line has a certain elasticity, this moulding takes place each time after application of the operating pressure. For maintenance work, for example for cleaning purposes, the inner tube can again be removed from the support element, and afterwards reinserted again, either pneumatically, hydraulically or, if appropriate, by mechanical pulling or pressing.
According to one embodiment of the invention, at least the connector element has a relief opening. Particularly in the case of fairly long line elements, one or more relief openings can also be formed in the support element.
In known plastic tube systems, a problem arises in providing the tube ends with suitable connector elements that ensure a reliable join between the connector element and the inner line under the conditions in question, in particular at temperatures of up to 300° C. and at pressures of several hundred bar. Proposed solutions involving adhesively bonded connector elements have proven disadvantageous in practice, because of the poor adherence of the fluoroplastics that are preferably used on account of their resistance to chemicals. In purely mechanical clamp connections, the problem is that, on the one hand, a firm and leaktight connection has to be ensured also at high pressures, and, on the other hand, the inner line should not be clamped shut. To solve this problem, the present invention proposes that the free end of the line element is sealed by means of at least one preferably conical clamp. A particular advantage of the solution according to the invention is that only a primary seal is needed, since, when the pressure in the system increases, the inner line is pressed more firmly onto the sealing cone and therefore remains leaktight. The mechanical fixing of the inner line is in this case provided for by the connector element in conjunction with the mechanically securely connected support element serving as support jacket, via static friction between inner line and the support element. In addition, a light clamping can be provided. The inner line is thus held securely even at very high pressures and upon heating of the system, without any danger of constriction by a sealing and retaining cone. The mechanical fixing of the support element in the connector element can be effected for example by clamping sleeves, threads or adhesive bonds.
According to a first variant, the connector element has a connector piece which can interact with complementary connector bushings provided on the components to which the line element according to the invention is to be attached. For example, the connector piece can be designed as a screwed connection with a conical sealing surface which can interact with a complementary sealing surface of a component that is to be connected to the line element. According to one embodiment of the invention, the inner line extends into the connector piece and, when screwed into the corresponding mating piece, is compressed such that the connector piece is sealed against the inner line only upon screwing.
According to a second variant, the support element comprises at least two support tube portions which are connected releasably to one another via a connector element designed as joining element. Here too, the mechanical fixing of the support element in the connector element can be effected via clamping sleeves, threads or adhesive bonds.
In both variants, the construction of the connector element ensures that the tube cannot emerge from the connector piece at high pressures or be squeezed together by liquid that diffuses out.
The inventive design of the connector elements permits a considerable lengthening of the working life of the line element. If the line has to be made shorter, for example because of ageing or soiling in the connector pieces, it is not necessary to exchange the entire line element. After dismantling of the support line, all that needs to be done is to cut off the soiled end portion of the line element. A shorter support tube or the shortened support tube is then fitted over the old inner line.
According to an advantageous embodiment of the line element according to the invention, the inner line is made of a fluoroplastic resistant to chemicals, for example of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), polytetrafluoroethylene compounds, that is to say PTFE with suitable fillers such as glass fibres, charcoal, bronze, molybdenum disulphide or special steel, perfluoroalkoxy copolymers (PFA), polychloro-trifluoroethylene or polyvinylidene fluoride. In addition, however, the inner line can also be made of high-performance plastics such as polyether ether ketone (PEEK), polyoxymethylene or polyamide.
Advantageously, the support element comprises a support tube which surrounds the inner line and which is preferably made of metal, for example titanium or special steel, a ceramic material or a temperature-resistant and pressure-resistant plastic, for example polyether ether ketone. The support tube can in particular be designed as a flexible metal wire mesh or metal wire cloth. Particularly as a wire mesh, the support tube can be designed such that, on the one hand, the necessary support function is ensured and, on the other hand, the mesh already provides the required relief openings for release of the substances diffused through the inner line.
The support element can also comprise a support body which surrounds the inner line and which is made of a cured or dried moulding compound. The production of the support body by means of a curing or drying moulding compound permits particularly good flexibility in the shaping of the support body. The support element can also be made up of two or more solid elements which form a hollow space for receiving the inner tube and which are resistant, at least for a certain duration, to the reagents that are used. Optionally, the support body or the multi-part support element can also be surrounded by a housing, preferably a metal or plastic housing, which further increases the stability of the arrangement.
The internal diameter of the inner line of the line element according to the invention preferably lies in the range of 0.5 to 5 mm, and particularly preferably in the range of 1 to 3 mm.
The line element according to the invention can also be temperature-controlled. For example, the support element can be heated by electric resistance heating or by inductive or resistive heating to temperatures of over 300° C. By mounting Peltier elements in or on the support element, the latter can also be cooled to temperatures far below 0° C. Of course, it is also possible to lead the line element through a temperature-control medium which is heated or cooled to the desired temperature via a secondary circuit.
In addition to its use purely for transporting substances, the line element according to the invention can also be used as a reactor for chemical or physical processes. The invention accordingly also relates to the use of the described line element for physical and/or chemical treating or influencing of fluids contained in the inner line of the line element. The corresponding physical and/or chemical processes can be realized, for example, as continuous-flow processes or as stopped-flow processes. For example, the line element according to the invention or segments of several line elements according to the invention can be divided into zones in which energy is delivered or removed, for example by cooling, heating or irradiating. The line system according to the invention can also be used for mixing and, if appropriate, subsequent reaction of different substances, and the materials involved can also be present in different states of aggregation. Typical areas of application of the line element according to the invention also lie in chemical analysis, for example continuous-flow digestion, high-pressure chromatography or gas chromatography.
The invention is explained in more detail below with reference to the illustrative embodiments depicted in the attached drawings, in which:
The left-hand end of the connecting line 13 from
Also in the variants shown in
If the inner tube 14 were to become blocked at its end area 45 as a result of soiling or mechanical defects, it is possible, in the variant in
The reactor 51 and the cooler 52 can, for example, be designed in accordance with the variants shown in
The device 50 works as follows: To prepare for the reactions, pumps 57, 58 and multi-way valves 59, 60, 61, 62 fill all the lines of the system with a carrier liquid 63, which at the same time can also be reagent or substrate. At the same time an HPLC pump 64 builds up the system pressure in the reactor 51 and in the cooler 52 counter to the resistance of the restrictor 65. The restrictor 65 can either be a thin capillary or a pressure control valve. After the system pressure has been built up, the reactor 51 is heated to the desired operating temperature. As soon as the operating temperature is reached, the pump 57 suctions one or more starting materials 53, 54 via the valves 59 and 61, while the pump 58 suctions one or more reagents 55, 56 via the valves 60 and 62. The starting materials and the reagents are then metered through a T-piece 66 and valve 67 into a sample loop 68 and mixed. Alternatively, the sample loop 68 can be filled directly in the bypass from a process or by any desired other filling method. The valve 67 is then switched so that the content of the sample loop 68 can be introduced into the reaction system 51, 52. After the fluids have been heated and the desired reactions have been carried out in the reactor 51, and after subsequent cooling in the cooler 52, the end product can be collected via a controllable valve 69 into different vessels 70 or can be delivered directly to a measurement device (not shown), for example via a line 71 branching off from the valve.
Several high-pressure reaction systems of this kind can be arranged in parallel or in series, in order to increase the throughput or to execute different treatment steps one after another.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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DE102005018352.2 | Apr 2005 | DE | national |