The present invention relates to a method for cleaning tar-bearing waste water and an apparatus for performing the method.
In gas production, based on gasification of biomass, coal, etc., it is well-known that the produced gas contains tar, which in connection with the use of the gas in e.g. internal combustion engines or gas turbines, has to be removed from the produced gas. The traditional way of removing the tar is by cooling the gas, whereby the tar and possible water is condensed, leaving a relatively clean gas and a separated mixture of water and tar.
The mixture of water and tar cannot be disposed of to the environment due to the content of tar, including polyaromatic hydrocarbons and phenols, which are considered environmentally unsafe, possibly carcinogenic, poisonous, etc. Furthermore, the acidity of the mixture may also constitute an environmental problem.
It has been suggested to use ultraviolet light-induced wet oxidation or adsorption on various coke sorbents to clean the waste water. However, electric energy consumption is relatively high for the ultraviolet light-induced wet oxidation and the adsorption has certain limitations due to the presence of non-adsorbable compounds.
It has been suggested (Swedish application 402214) that the waste water is evaporated and separated into a combustible tar fraction and a (more or less) clean steam fraction. The combustible fraction is subsequently burned (oxidised) to provide heat for the evaporation process—either by direct contact or through a heat exchanger. However, in this way the calorific value of the tar is converted directly to heat, which severely limits the utilisation in high efficiency power producing machinery—specifically gas engines and gas turbines. Therefore, the application of the technology suggested will be limited to steam turbines and other equipment based on external firing.
It is the object of the present invention to provide a method for cleaning tar-bearing waste water and an apparatus for performing said method of the kind referred to above, with which it is possible to provide a high efficiency of the process. By high efficiency is meant high cleaning capability and also efficient recovery of the energetic content in the tar contaminants for direct use in a gas-engine or gas turbine. This also implies, that in contrast with Swedish application 402214—where the contaminants are oxidised—the present invention describes a cracking process conducted under reducing conditions, where the high molecular tars and acids are transformed into light combustible gases which can be utilised in e.g. gas engines, gas turbines or the like. This object is achieved with a method for cleaning tar-bearing waste water and an apparatus for performing said method of said kind, which according to the present invention also comprises the features set forth hereinafter. With this arrangement, a relatively clean part of the waste water on vapour form is cracked at a high temperature providing energy containing light combustible gases for use in e.g. gas engines, gas turbines or the like, and at the same time a high-boiling-point part of the waste water is provided, which is a combustible concentrate of the waste water, which may be used for heating purposes. Preferred embodiments of the method and apparatus are revealed hereinafter.
In the following detailed part of the present description, the invention will be explained in more detail with reference to the exemplary embodiments of an apparatus for performing the method in accordance with the present invention shown in the drawings, in which
The apparatus shown in
An alternative apparatus in accordance with the invention is shown in
In a preferred process in the system shown in
In connection with the cleaning of tar-containing water in connection with a gasifier, the following cleaning capabilities apply:
The original contaminated water is separated into two streams:
A heavily contaminated fraction (about 10%) with a TOC of about 300,000 mg/litre and gross calorific value of about 13 MJ/kg (65-75% of this will be reused internally in the process—the rest may be burned in auxiliary boilers in the plant during district heating peak loads).
A clean condensate with a TOC below 15 mg/litre, a total phenol content below 0.15 mg/litre and an acidity of pH=6.90 to 7.10 (thereby eliminating the need of neutralisation).
In a plant corresponding to
steam 1152 kg/hour at about 97° C. and 100 kPa, which after the droplet separator 7 is compressed in a high-pressure fan 6 to about 105° C. and 105 kPa, a combustible concentrate 114 kg/h of which the major fraction is used in the process at the burner 5 as described above. The steam part is heated in the heat exchanger 3 in counterflow with steam leaving the reactor 2 to about 380° C. and 104 kPa. After the heat exchanger, the temperature is raised to 800° C. using about 81 kg/h of the combustible concentrate burned off in the burner 5. Based on 0.305 kg/MJ, about 320 kg/h air 16 is used at this point. In the
The purified water has a TOC of about 14 mg/litre and contains about 0.4 mg/litre phenol, where regulations require below 15 mg/litre.
Although the invention above has been described in connection with preferred embodiments thereof, it will be evident for a man skilled in the art that several modifications are possible within the scope of the invention.
By operating the evaporator in a way to admit a larger fraction of organic contaminants in the steam from the evaporator or alternatively (or additionally) inject part of or all of the separated tar-contaminants from the separator directly into the reaction chamber, which is being held at low stoechiometric conditions, the tar components will be cracked into lighter combustible gases. When the tar-water cleaning system described is used in connection with a gasifier these gases might subsequently be added to the gas cleaning system of the associated gasifier and increase overall power efficiency.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2001 00919 | Jun 2001 | DK | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DK02/00398 | 6/13/2002 | WO | 00 | 5/19/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/100779 | 12/19/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2982623 | Johnson | May 1961 | A |
4543177 | Murthy et al. | Sep 1985 | A |
6376732 | Ngan et al. | Apr 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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3926538 | Feb 1991 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040186338 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |