The invention relates to the removal of substances such as oils, greases, lubricants, or particulates in general from solid matrices.
As is known, increasing sensitivity to the effects produced by waste and industrial processes on the environment leads to an ever greater need to separate the above-mentioned substances from the solid matrices on which they are deposited, for disposal or recovery. These matrices are material substrates in general that are impregnated with oil, grease or the like, such as, for example, the turnings resulting from turning operations, which are contaminated by the lubricant liquid used in the cutting operations; in these circumstances, it is necessary to separate the lubricant from the turnings in order to be able to send each of them to subsequent disposal and recovery stages.
A similar situation arises with empty engine-oil containers made of recyclable plastics material. In this connection, U.S. Pat. No. 5,711,829 in the name of Smith et al. describes a method of removing the residual oil present inside the respective packages to permit recovery of the oil as well as of the plastics material.
This method is based on the use of carbon dioxide in the liquid or supercritical state, whose solvent properties with respect to organic substances such as engine oils or other types of oil, have been well known and utilized in many applications for some time.
The method of the above-mentioned American patent is substantially similar to that used for the extraction of essential oils, natural aromas, or other substances (for example caffeine) from seeds, plants, etc.; it provides for the fluid solvent in liquid or supercritical phase, at a temperature of between 20° C. and 35° C., to come into contact with the bodies or materials to be treated, which are arranged in a suitable treatment chamber or pressurized container for this purpose.
The carbon dioxide with the organic substances dissolved therein is then expanded and treated thermally so as to create, in a container disposed downstream known as a separator, a liquid phase containing the above-mentioned substances, and a gaseous CO2 phase; the former collects in the bottom of the container, from which it is then evacuated in order to recover the substances, and the latter is liquefied by compression and cooled before returning to the washing chamber in order to pass over the bodies present therein again.
An important problem relating to the implementation of these known methods consists in effectively removing the substances from the solid matrices, whilst at the same time limiting the energy consumption which is necessary to achieve this result.
This problem has not been addressed satisfactorily in the prior art in general, which instead has concentrated mainly on seeking the best method of separating or removing the desired substances, for example, with the use of additives or other co-solvents, together with CO2.
The present invention proposes to solve the above-mentioned problem; it therefore has the object of devising a method of removing and separating substances from a solid matrix by means of a gaseous fluid in liquid or even supercritical phase, wherein the mechanical work performed on the fluid in order to compress it can be exploited in an improved manner.
This object is achieved by a method in which the heat of condensation (or apart of it) yielded by the fluid in one stage of the operative cycle is used as heat for evaporating the fluid in another stage.
This permits, on the one hand, to cool the operating fluid after its compression during the operating cycle, and on the other hand, to heat it after expansion, by a mutual exchange of heat.
The features of the method according to the invention and of apparatus for implementing it are set forth in the claims appended to this description; the invention also comprises a heat exchanger intended for the above-mentioned apparatus.
These features will be better understood in the light of the description given below, relating to a non-limiting embodiment of a cycle for the removal and separation of the lubricant from swarf from machining operations such as turning and the like.
This embodiment is illustrated in the drawings, wherein:
The diagram of
To facilitate an understanding of the operative stages of which the operating cycle of this embodiment is composed, in addition to the main components of the apparatus, a series of points 1 to 9 which identify the starts and finishes of the stages, are also indicated in the diagram of
The apparatus 19 comprises a reservoir 21 for the storage of liquid CO2 in equilibrium with its vapour, at a pressure of from 50-70 bar (preferably about 65 bar); the base of the reservoir, from which the carbon dioxide which circulates through the apparatus emerges, coincides with the starting point 1 of the cycle.
Downstream of the reservoir 21, there is a heat-exchanger 22 for supercooling the CO2; this exchanger is of known type and serves basically to keep the liquid carbon dioxide in temperature conditions of between 15° C. and 30° C., eliminating the presence of any gaseous phase therein, so as to permit greater efficiency of the extraction process.
However, if the apparatus were in a low-temperature environment suitable for achieving the same effect, the exchanger 22 would be superfluous and could therefore be eliminated.
In the diagram of
These containers contain the swarf to be treated and, since shut-off valves 25, 26, 27 and 28 are disposed upstream and downstream of them, it is possible, in the apparatus 19, to exclude one or other of the containers 23, 24 from the circulating CO2 stream.
It is thus possible, whilst extracting the lubricant from the swarf in one of the containers, to empty and then refill the other container, so as to make optimal use of the apparatus.
Downstream of the containers 23 and 24 there is an expansion valve 28, for allowing the CO2 to expand with a substantially isoenthalpic transformation to a pressure value of between 40 and 55 bar (preferably 50 bar); this expansion, which takes place between points 4 and 5 in the diagram of
After passing through the exchanger 30, the carbon dioxide and the lubricating oil form a gaseous phase and a liquid phase, respectively, which are separated in a cyclone 32.
Here, the oil is deposited at the bottom, from where it is then evacuated by means of a valve 33 and a depressurizing container 34, whilst the gaseous CO2 continues towards a compressor 36.
The compressor brings the CO2 back to a pressure level of between 50 and 70 bar; the compression stage takes place between points 6, 7 of
The exchanger 38 enables the temperature of the gaseous CO2 to be reduced before it is condensed; in fact, as can be seen from the Mollier diagram shown in
This is a technical solution which is also made to prevent a liquid phase and a gaseous phase being present between the intake (point 6) and the output (point 7).
However, in principle, the exchanger 38 could be eliminated or in any case excluded from the CO2 cycle, since the CO2 could be cooled along the path downstream of the compressor by exchanging heat with the outside environment in which the apparatus 19 is installed; however, this will also depend on other factors, such as the magnitude of the heat exchanges of the apparatus with the outside environment, or the time required to perform the operating cycle.
The compressed CO2 is then condensed (from 8 to 9), by heat exchange with the liquid CO2 which evaporates in the exchanger 30, and returns to the storage reservoir 21.
The execution of the operating cycle for the removal and separation of the lubricant from the swarf performed by the apparatus of
Indeed, the properties of liquid or supercritical CO2 at ambient temperature (20° C.-25° C.) as a solvent for organic substances such as lubricating oils, are well known.
By performing the washing (points 3 and 4 of the diagram of
The cyclone separator 32 provided in the apparatus 19 performs this function in optimal manner, also by virtue of the heat previously received from the fluid in the exchanger 30.
Since this heat is supplied by the CO2 itself, which condenses between points 8 and 9 of the cycle, the advantageous energy saving resulting from the reuse of the heat of condensation which would otherwise be lost, is clear.
Furthermore, the advantage over a situation in which the CO2 were to be heated for being evaporated and its heating were performed by electrical resistors or other means which would require the supply of energy from outside, is even greater; similar remarks also apply if the CO2 were to be condensed by an external cooling fluid.
Basically it can therefore be said that in the cycle according to the present invention, the mechanical work performed by the compressor 36 is utilized to the maximum since it serves both for circulating the CO2 in the apparatus 19 (also overcoming the inevitable hydraulic friction) and for supplying energy to the fluid, which is utilized in the form of heat exchanged in the evaporation and condensation stages.
In this context it should be stressed that, in accordance with a preferred embodiment, the exchanger 30 is of the type with plates.
More specifically, as can be seen in
This set is of the type commonly available commercially, for example, such as those produced by Mueller or Alfa-Laval, and has, on one side, three connectors 53, 54, and 55, communicating with the exterior of the casing; the first two are intended for admitting to the exchanger the CO2 which evaporates after point 5 in the apparatus of
On the other side of the set of plates 52, there is a fourth connector 56 from which the CO2, compressed by the compressor 36 and entered inside the housing 50, passes; the housing 50 is in fact filled with compressed CO2 (which is also supercooled in this embodiment) coming from point 8 of the apparatus, to which it is connected by means of a manifold 57.
The condensing CO2 and that which is in the evaporation stage thus exchange heat with one another in the exchanger 30, along their respective paths within the set of plates 52 as in normal plate exchangers.
However, since the plates are in the casing 50 at the external compressed CO2 pressure of 50-70 bar, the pressure of the fluid circulating inside them is compensated; by virtue of this arrangement it is thus possible, in the present invention, to use plate exchangers which would not otherwise be able to withstand the high working pressures required for this application.
It should in fact be pointed out that even the strongest plate exchangers with braze-welded plates are able to operate at working pressures somewhat lower than those indicated above for a cycle of removal and separation with CO2.
However, they have a large heat-exchange capacity in relation to their fairly small dimensions, particularly when compared with exchangers with tube nests.
In other words, with this embodiment of the invention, in addition to the above-mentioned results in terms of energy saving, the considerable advantage that a limited space is occupied by the parts involved in the heat exchanges necessary for the execution of the cycle is achieved.
Naturally, variations of the invention with respect to the embodiment described above are possible.
In the first place, it should be pointed out that although the invention was devised for the removal and separation of lubricant from swarf from machining operations, it may also be applied in a similar or different manner to other fields.
Indeed it is clear that the same operating principles described above also apply to the extraction of substances from solid matrices other than swarf and this can be achieved with operating fluids other than carbon dioxide.
For example, the extraction of essences from plants and vegetables in general, or the removal of surface deposits and encrustations from bodies of various kinds, such as electronic or mechanical components, are hereby mentioned; the invention may also be used in connection with the separation of substances contained in liquids, and should not therefore be limited purely to solid matrices.
Within the scope of applications of this type, other process fluids may be used as alternatives to CO2, for example, light alkanes or alkenes (up to 4 carbon atoms) or hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs).
It will be appreciated that in such circumstances, the apparatus which implements the removal cycle may also undergo modifications with respect to that of the diagram of
It has already been stated above that in some situations one or both of the stages for the supercooling and the de-superheating of the CO2 could be eliminated or by-passed; similarly, it should be pointed out that the storage reservoir 21 could also be excluded from the circulation of CO2 when the system is in operation.
This situation is shown schematically by the broken line in
All of these variants fall within the scope of the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IT02/00521 | 8/6/2002 | WO | 2/7/2005 |