Gaseous oxygen produced by air separation plants is usually at elevated pressure from about 20 to 50 bar. The basic distillation scheme is usually a double column process producing oxygen at the bottom of the low pressure column, operating at 1.4 to 4 bar. The oxygen must be compressed to higher pressure either by oxygen compressor or by the liquid pumped process. Because of the safety issues associated with the oxygen compressors, most recent oxygen plants are based on the liquid pumped process. In order to vaporize liquid oxygen at elevated pressure there is a need for an additional booster compressor to raise a portion of the feed air or nitrogen to higher pressure in the range of about 40 to 80 bar. In essence, the booster replaces the oxygen compressor. Pressurized air delivered by the booster compressor is condensed against the vaporizing liquid oxygen in a heat exchanger of the separation unit. This type of process is very power intensive and it is desirable to lower its power consumption when there exists another inexpensive supply of other forms of energy-latent streams, such as cryogenic liquid, pressurized gases, etc.
A typical liquid pumped process is illustrated in
When a cryogenic liquid source is available at low cost, for example a liquid from a nearby air separation unit that produces liquid as a by-product, or a liquid produced by a liquefier that operates at night or during the time when power rates are low, or simply a low cost liquid from a surplus source, it is desirable to feed this liquid to the air separation plant to reduce its power consumption. However, when an air separation plant is fed with a liquid, some liquid products must be extracted from the plant by virtue of overall cold balance. However, since the liquid feed is already available at low cost, there is not much incentive to produce any significant amount of additional liquid products. Therefore, it is advantageous to provide a process capable of consuming those liquids efficiently.
The cold compression process as described in the prior art can be a good solution to the problem, since it uses the energy of refrigeration produced by the integrated expanders to yield efficient product compression.
A cold compression process, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,478,980, provides a technique to drive the oxygen plant with one single air compressor. In this process, air to be distilled is chilled in the main exchanger; then, further compressed by a booster compressor driven by a turbine exhausting into the high pressure column of a double column process. By doing so, the discharge pressure of the air compressor is in the range of 15 bar which is also quite advantageous for the purification unit. One inconvenience of this approach is the relatively high power consumption and an expander must be used to drive the process.
Some different versions of the cold compression process have also been described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,379,598, U.S. Pat. No. 5,901,576 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,626,008.
In U.S. Pat. No. 5,379,598, a fraction of feed air is further compressed by a booster compressor followed by a cold compressor to yield a pressurized stream needed for the vaporization of oxygen. This approach still has an expander as the main provider of refrigeration.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,901,576 describes several arrangements of cold compression schemes utilizing the expansion of vaporized rich liquid of the bottom of the high pressure column, or the expansion of high pressure nitrogen to drive the cold compressor. In some cases, motor driven cold compressors were also used.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,626,008 describes a heat pump cycle utilizing a cold compressor to improve the distillation process for the production of low purity oxygen for a double vaporizer oxygen process.
The prior art does not address the issue of using a liquid feed efficiently without having to produce other liquids or cold gas.
It is the purpose of this invention to provide an approach to solve this problem.
According to this invention, there is provided a low temperature air separation process for producing pressurized gaseous product in an air separation unit using a system of distillation columns and a liquid feed stream derived from air, which comprises the following steps:
In the context of this document, “derived from air” includes cooled purified air and mixture of air gases, which have been cooled and purified.
For a further understanding of the nature and objects for the present invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like elements are given the same or analogous reference numbers and wherein:
Compressed air substantially free of moisture and CO2 (stream 1) at about 6 bar absolute is cooled in exchanger 65. A portion 52 with a flow rate about 20% of stream 1 is extracted from an intermediate point of exchanger 65 at cryogenic temperature −125° C. and sent to the first cold compressor 50 to be compressed to higher pressure of about 45 bar to yield the first pressurized gas stream 53. The compression heat increases the temperature of stream 53 and it will be again introduced at the warm end of heat exchanger 65 and cooled to yield the cooled first pressurized gas stream 55 also at about −125° C. A second cold compressor 51 will further compress stream 55 to yield the second pressurized gas stream 54 at about 60 bar. Stream 54 reintroduced at an intermediate point of heat exchanger 65, at least partially liquefied, cooled to about −176° C. and removed from the cold end of exchanger 65 as stream 56 to feed the high pressure distillation column 80 following expansion in a valve. The remaining portion 2 of compressed air is also fed in gaseous form to column 80 operated at about 6 bar. Nitrogen rich liquid 8 is withdrawn at the top of column 80 and sent to low pressure column 81 as reflux. A side stream 4 with composition close to air is optionally extracted from column 80 and sent to column 81 as feed. An oxygen enriched liquid stream 3 also called rich liquid is withdrawn at the bottom of 80 and fed to column 81 as reflux. The reflux streams are preferably subcooled before being sent to column 81. A source of liquid air 30 from storage tank 70 is fed to the column 81 as additional feed, its flow rate being about 10% mol. of the feed air 1. Liquid oxygen produced as stream 20 at the bottom of the low pressure column 81 is pumped by pump 21 to a high pressure of 40 bar and vaporized in exchanger 65 to yield gaseous oxygen product 22. Low pressure nitrogen rich gas 9 at a pressure of about 1.5 bar from column 81 is warmed in exchanger 65 and exits as stream 41. Medium pressure nitrogen gas 6 can be withdrawn from column 80 and warmed in exchanger 65 to yield medium pressure gaseous product 7. Argon production (not shown) can be optionally added to the process for argon production.
If the temperature of the outlet gas of the cold compressor 50 is much higher than ambient temperature, due to its high compression ratio, the compressor's outlet gas can be cooled by a water-cooled or air-cooled exchanger (not shown) before being introduced into exchanger 65 for cooling.
The source of liquid 30 is a product of air separation plant or liquefaction plant and can be of any composition of air components namely oxygen and nitrogen. It should not contain impurities that can be harmful to a safe and reliable operation of the plant such as hydrocarbons, moisture, or CO2, etc. In
If the liquid 30 does contain some oxygen (for example liquid air, rich liquid or liquid oxygen) then the gaseous feed air stream 1 can be reduced in flow to yield the same balance in molecules of oxygen. By doing so the oxygen product flow 22 can remain unchanged.
It can be seen from the above description that the air separation unit operated with the embodiment shown in
As indicated above, if the source of liquid can be obtained inexpensively, there is not much economic incentive to produce liquid products. However from the technical point of view, it is possible to produce some liquids. In
It will be noted that the shown apparatus does not include any turboexpanders. Thus the addition of cryogenic liquid 30 provides essentially all the refrigeration required by the process.
Of course, it is possible to equip the process with a turboexpander to produce liquid product during the periods when power rates are low, those liquid product is then fed to the process according to the invention during the periods when power rates are high to achieve the savings indicated in this invention. The turboexpander can be of any type, for example a Claude expander wherein cold elevated pressure air is expanded into the high pressure column of a double-column plant, or an air expander arranged such that air is expanded into the low pressure column, or a nitrogen expander wherein the high pressure nitrogen rich gas extracted from the high pressure column is expanded to lower pressure. The turboexpander, if so equipped, does not need to be operated during the time when liquid is fed to the system according to this invention, however, sometimes for the ease of operation or for the reduction of the quantity of liquid feed, it can be kept running. Multiple expanders are also possible.
If some high pressure nitrogen is desirable, one can pump liquid nitrogen product (not shown in
The process uses a standard double column, including a high pressure column 80 and a low pressure column 81. Air is compressed in compressor 10 and substantially freed of moisture and CO2 (stream 1) by purification unit 11 at about 6 bar absolute. The compressed purified air 1 is cooled in exchanger 65. For all of
When the cost of electricity is above a predetermined level (peak), as shown in
If the temperature of the outlet gas of the cold compressor 50 is much higher than ambient temperature, due to its high compression ratio, the compressor's outlet gas can be cooled by a water-cooled or air-cooled exchanger (not shown) before being introduced into exchanger 65 for cooling.
The source of liquid 30 can be derived from the air separation plant itself In this mode, the turbines 13 and 14 and warm compressor 15 are not operational.
Another variant of the off-peak mode is described in
It will be understood that many additional changes in the details, materials, steps and arrangement of parts, which have been herein described in order to explain the nature of the invention, may be made by those skilled in the art within the principle and scope of the invention as expressed in the appended claims. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the specific embodiments in the examples given above.
This patent application is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/572,048, filed Jan. 12, 2007, which was a §371 of International PCT Application PCT/EP2005/053315, filed Jul. 12, 2005, which claimed the benefit of U.S. Pat. No. 7,272,954, filed Jul. 14, 2004, all of which are incorporated by reference in their entireties.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11572048 | Aug 2008 | US |
Child | 14291569 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10890650 | Jul 2004 | US |
Child | 11572048 | US |