The present invention relates to a method and to a device for separation at cryogenic temperature. The separation may be a separation by distillation and/or by dephlegmation and/or by absorption. The equipment used for this separation will be referred to as a “column”. Thus, a column may for example be a distillation or absorption column. Reduced to its simplest expression, it may be a phase separator. Otherwise, a column may also be a device in which dephlegmation takes place.
Magnetic refrigeration relies on the use of magnetic materials that exhibit a magnetocaloric effect. Reversible, this effect is manifested by a variation in them temperature of these materials when they are subjected to the application of an external magnetic field. The optimum ranges within which these materials are used lie in the vicinity of their Curie temperature (Tc). This is because the greater the variations in magnetization and, therefore, the changes in magnetic entropy, the greater the changes in their temperature. The magnetocaloric effect is said to be direct when the temperature of the material increases when placed in a magnetic field, and indirect when it cools when placed in a magnetic field. The remainder of the description will be given for the direct case, but it is obvious to a person skilled in the art how to reapply this to the indirect case. There are many thermodynamic cycles based on this principle. A conventional magnetic refrigeration cycle consists i) in magnetizing the material in order to increase its temperature, ii) in cooling the material at a constant magnetic field in order to dissipate the heat, iii) in demagnetizing the material in order to cool it, and iv) in heating the material in a constant (generally zero) magnetic field in order to absorb heat.
A magnetic refrigeration device employs elements made of magnetocaloric material which generate heat when magnetized and absorb heat when demagnetized. It may employ a magnetocaloric material regenerator to amplify the temperature difference between the “hot source” and the “cold source”: the magnetic refrigeration is then said to be magnetic refrigeration employing active magnetic regeneration.
It is known from EP-A-2551005 how to use the magnetocaloric effect to supply cold to a method of separation at sub-ambient temperature.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,502,404 describes the use of the magnetocaloric effect (in place of the conventional use of an expansion turbine) to supply the cold (needed to provide the refrigeration balance of the method) to a cryogenic method of separating air gases, the separation energy being conventionally supplied by the pressurized air which allows the operation of the vaporizer-condenser of the double column (it being possible for the low-pressure column to be reduced to a simple vaporizer in the case of a nitrogen generator). The separation (distillation) is performed partly under pressure, typically between 5 and 6 bara in the medium-pressure column.
The present invention tackles the problem of how to perform separation entirely at a very low pressure, the fluid that is to be separated carrying no energy (in the form of pressure) used for the separation and for keeping the process cold. The energy for separation and the energy for keeping cold are supplied by heat pumps, independently of the fluid that is to be separated and the pressure thereof.
It has long been known how to use one and the same circuit to provide both heat to the reboiler of a distillation column and frigories to the condenser of this same column. U.S. Pat. No. 2,916,888 discloses one example for the distillation of hydrocarbons.
A heat pump is a thermodynamic device that allows a quantity of heat to be transferred from a medium considered to be the “emitter” and referred to as the “cold source” from which heat is extracted, to a medium considered to be the “receiver” and referred to as the “hot source” to which the heat is supplied, the cold source being at a colder temperature than the hot source.
The conventional cycle used in the prior art for this type of application is a thermodynamic cycle of compressing-cooling (condensing)-expanding-reheating (vaporizing) a refrigeration fluid.
Separating at low pressure, or almost at near-atmospheric pressure, is easier, because of the greater volatility between the components that are to be separated. By combining this effect with the very good performance of heat pumps that employ the magnetocaloric effect, it is possible to arrive at a method with very good separation energy.
Moreover, separation at low temperature, or even near-atmospheric pressure, allows a simplification in the design and mechanical integrity of the equipment of the separation device, thereby reducing the cost thereof.
An ambient temperature is the temperature of the ambient air in which the method is situated or, alternatively, a temperature of a cooling water circuit connected with the air temperature.
A sub-ambient temperature is at least 10° C. below ambient temperature.
A cryogenic temperature is below −50° C.
A first subject of the invention provides a method for separating air, by separation at cryogenic temperature, in which:
a. at least one first heat pump, referred to as the separation heat pump, exchanges heat directly or indirectly between a first cold source at cryogenic temperature and a first hot source at cryogenic temperature thus providing at least some of the separation energy and
b. at least a second heat pump, referred to as the refrigeration balance heat pump, exchanges heat directly or indirectly between a second cold source at a first cryogenic temperature and a second hot source at a temperature higher than the first temperature, for example at ambient temperature, thus providing at least some of the cold needed to maintain the refrigeration balance of the method, the separation taking place in a single column or a set of columns, the pressure of the single column or of the columns of the set being below 2 bara, preferably below 1.5 bara, preferably at least at a pressure that differs from atmospheric pressure only by the losses in pressure head of the elements that connect the column or columns with the atmosphere, the first cold source and the first hot source being directly or indirectly thermally connected to the single column or to one column of the set, characterized in that the first and second heat pumps use the magnetocaloric effect and in that the second cold source consists of air (7) intended to be separated in the single column or the set of columns or of a fluid coming from the single column (19) or from a column of the set.
According to other optional features:
Another subject of the invention provides a device for separating a mixture, for example of air gases, using a method of separation at sub-ambient, or even cryogenic, temperature, comprising a single column or a set of columns in which sub-ambient, or even cryogenic, separation takes place, means for sending a mixture for example of air gases to the column or a column of the set, means for withdrawing at least one fluid enriched in a component of the mixture from the column, or one column of the set, at least a first heat pump, using the magnetocaloric effect, referred to as the separation heat pump, for exchanging heat directly or indirectly between a first cold source at sub-ambient, or even cryogenic, temperature and a first hot source at sub-ambient, or even cryogenic, temperature thus supplying at least part of the separation energy and at least a second heat pump, using the magnetocaloric effect, referred to as the refrigeration balance heat pump, for exchanging heat directly or indirectly between a second cold source at a first sub-ambient, or even cryogenic, temperature and a second hot source at a temperature higher than the first temperature, for example at ambient temperature, thus supplying at least some of the cold needed to maintain the refrigeration balance of the method, the pressure of the single column or of the columns of the set being below 2 bara, preferably below 1.5 bara, so that the column is or the columns are connected to the atmosphere via at least one pipe comprising no expansion means, the first cold source and the first hot source being directly or indirectly thermally connected to the single column or to a column of the set.
According to other optional subjects:
The invention will be described in greater detail with reference to the figures which illustrate methods according to the invention.
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The part 15 of the air (indirect cold source of the second heat pump) is at least partially condensed in a heat exchanger 17 by exchange of heat with a fluid flow 23 which becomes cool by means of a second heat pump using the magnetocaloric effect 21. A cooling fluid 51 (hot source of the second heat pump), typically ambient air or cooling water, is sent to the second heat pump using the magnetocaloric effect 21. The column comprises a bottom reboiler 33 and a top-end condenser 35. The reboiler (the liquid boiled in the reboiler is the indirect hot source of the first heat pump) is heated by means of a fluid circuit 37 in connection with a first heat pump using the magnetocaloric effect 31. This first heat pump using the magnetocaloric effect 31 is also used to cool a fluid 39 which cools the top-end condenser 35 (the gas condensed in the condenser is the indirect cold source of the first heat pump). The fluids 37 and 39 may be the same or different. An oxygen-enriched liquid 29 is withdrawn from the bottom of the column 19 and a nitrogen-enriched gas 41 heats up in the exchanger 11 and is then used, at least in part, to regenerate the purification unit 9. An oxygen-enriched gas 25 is withdrawn from the bottom of the column 19, heats up in the exchanger 11 and is compressed by a compressor 27.
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The invention is described here in an application to the separation of air at cryogenic temperature. It is obvious that the invention also applies to other separations at sub-ambient temperatures for example to the separation of a mixture containing carbon monoxide and/or hydrogen and/or nitrogen and/or methane.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1358666 | Sep 2013 | FR | national |
1358667 | Sep 2013 | FR | national |
1358668 | Sep 2013 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2014/052246 | 9/10/2014 | WO | 00 |