A field of the present invention includes processes for the production of an olefin, including by a dehydrogenation process. Another field is production of propylene.
Olefin hydrocarbons are valued for the production of a variety of materials, including many petrochemicals. In some dehydrogenation processes, short chain saturated hydrocarbons are modified to form a corresponding olefin. A particularly useful olefin is propylene, which is produced by dehydrogenation of propane. Propylene is an enormously useful petrochemical commodity with demand steadily growing. Propylene is used in the production of polypropylene, acrylonitrile, acrylic acid, acrolein, and many others useful compounds. Polypropylene is widely used in many consumer and industrial products.
Propane dehydrogenation processes that produce olefins such as propylene may include feeding propane to a dehydrogenation unit where it is dehydrogenated using a catalyst to form propylene. A compressor compresses the effluent from the dehydrogenation unit to a high pressure to recover unreacted propane and propylene in a recovery section. The compressed reactor effluent is chilled to maximize propane and propylene recovery.
The hydrocarbon product stream may be communicated from the recovery unit to a de-ethanizer distillation column where ethane and lighter components are recovered as an overhead gas, and propane and propylene, and heavy boiling compounds are removed as bottoms. These bottoms are then communicated to a propylene splitter distillation column where propylene is recovered as an overhead liquid and unreacted propane from the bottoms may be recycled back to the dehydrogenation unit.
These processes often require significant energy input to boil, pressurize and otherwise process the various steps. The significant energy demands lead to high costs and other disadvantages.
One example method of the invention includes a process for producing an olefin comprising the steps of communicating a feed stream that comprises a paraffin to a distillation section, communicating a distillation section output stream to a reactor and reacting the distillation section output stream in the reactor to produce a reactor output stream comprising an olefin. A splitter feed stream that is in communication with and downstream from the reactor output stream is communicated to an olefin splitter, and a splitter output stream is communicated to a heat pump compressor. A heat pump compressor output stream is communicated to the distillation section and heat is used from the heat pump compressor output stream to reheat a distillation section stream that contains unreacted paraffin. In many, but not all, invention embodiments, the olefin is propylene and the paraffin is propane.
Invention embodiments achieve significant savings by extracting heat from a heat pump compressor output stream that was not previously exploited for useful purposes.
Embodiments of the invention achieve important benefits and advantages by significantly reducing required energy inputs for propylene production. Many invention embodiments achieve this through novel processes that exploit heat energy that was often lost to the atmosphere in prior art processes. In considering various invention embodiments illustrated herein, it will be appreciated that the invention will find utility in applications for production of olefins from paraffins in general and is not limited to propylene production. Significant utility exists, however, when invention embodiments are practiced with propylene with the result that corresponding example embodiments have been selected for illustration herein.
Referring now to the Figures,
A reactor output stream 18 containing propylene (with some ethane and potentially other impurities) is communicated to a de-ethanizer column 20 where impurities such as hydrogen, methane, ethane, and ethylene are removed as the overhead vapor 22. The product propylene and unreacted propane are taken as a de-ethanizer bottoms stream 24 to an olefin splitter 26 (which may be a propylene splitter, and may be referred to for convenience as “splitter 26”). A splitter overhead stream 27 contains a high percentage of propylene. A splitter bottom stream 28 containing unreacted propane and at least some heavy boiling components is recycled back to the distillation section 12 for removal of the heavy boiling components.
An additional splitter output stream 30 containing at least some, and in some cases as much as 100% vapor phase propylene is compressed in a two stage heat pump compressor 32 (which may be referred to for convenience as “HPC 32”). A HPC first output stream 34 is recycled to the splitter 26 as reflux after delivering heat to the splitter reboiler (described below), and a higher pressure and temperature HPC second output stream 36 is communicated to a distillation section heat exchanger 38 where it is used to heat a distillation section stream 40 that includes unreacted propane. Heat exchanger 38, as well as other heat exchangers discussed herein, may be of any conventional design, with one example being a counter-flow tube-in-shell design and another example using high heat transfer technologies such as Highflux™ (available from UOP, Desplaines, Ill.) or plate type exchangers. In some (but not all) embodiments, the heat exchanger 38 may be a reboiler, and may be referred to herein in some embodiments as such. The HPC second output stream 36 may then be communicated back to the splitter 18 as reflux (as illustrated) or may be communicated to other components such as a propylene collection tank (not illustrated).
In some prior art systems and methods, heat pump compressors such as HPC 32 produced excess heat that was lost to the environment. Through discovery of invention embodiments such as that illustrated in
Referring now to
A second distillation column overhead stream 58 containing a high proportion of propane is combined with the first distillation column overhead stream 54 and communicated to the reactor 16. A second distillation column reboiler 60 heats a second distillation column bottom recycle stream 62. A second distillation column bottom stream 64 containing heavier components is removed for use as desired.
It has been discovered that designing first and second distillation columns 50 and 52 in this manner allows for exploitation of heat from the HPC 32 (
In many embodiments, the first distillation column 50 is designed and operated so that the boiling point of the first distillation column recycle stream 57 is no more than about 60° C., and in some instances is about 57° C. The first distillation column recycle stream 57 (as well as first distillation column bottom stream 56, which is generally consistent in quality to that of recycle stream 57) will also contain a significant amount of unreacted propane, which in some embodiments is at least about 5% (by wt), in others at least about 10% (by wt), in others at least about 20% (by wt), and other amounts in other embodiments. This is a significant departure from the prior art, which generally teaches that it is desirable to achieve as high a rate of recovery as possible in a distillation column, and that a recycle and bottom stream should be as low as possible in unreacted fuel (e.g., propane). In many prior art methods and system, recovery rates exceeding 99% were disclosed, with the result that recycle and bottom streams included less than 1% unreacted fuel (e.g., propane). In current invention embodiments, on the other hand, recovery rates of no more than 95%, no more than 90%, or no more than 80%, or other lower amounts may be useful to ensure that heat from the HPC second output stream 36 can be exploited. This can also be expressed in terms of the difference in quality of first distillation column recycle stream 57 as well as first distillation column bottom stream 56 as compared to second distillation column bottom stream 64. In some embodiments, it is useful to operate with the first distillation column bottom stream 56/first distillation recycle stream having a boiling point that is at least 20° C. lower than that of the second distillation column bottom stream 64.
The quality of the first distillation column bottom recycle stream 57 in invention embodiments can affect the desired pressure level, and thereby, energy efficiency of using the HPC second output stream 36 for this purpose. Design parameters include exchanger design, flow rate, and temperature differential between first distillation column recycle stream 57 boiling point and HPC second output stream 36 temperature. In many invention embodiments, it is useful to maintain a temperature differential between first distillation column recycle stream 57 boiling point and HPC second output stream 36 temperature (with HPC second output stream 36 being hotter than first distillation column recycle stream 57) of at least 5° C., at least 8° C., at least 12° C., or other amounts to ensure that heat from the HPC second output stream 36 can be used to reheat the first distillation column bottom stream 56. In some embodiments, the HPC second output stream 36 is compressed to a pressure of at least about 25 kg/m2, and in some embodiments to about 30 kg/m2. When compressed to 30 kg/m2, the HPC second output stream 36 in some embodiments has a condensation temperature of about 68° C., making it useful as a heat source for bottom streams having boiling points below about 60° C. HPC second output stream 36 is communicated from reboiler 38 to the propylene splitter 26 (
The second distillation column bottom stream 64 may be generally consistent with bottom streams from single distillation columns of the prior art. It will have a much lower unreacted propane content than the first distillation column bottom stream 56 and correspondingly higher concentration of longer chain hydrocarbons, with a boiling point of 100° C. or more. Low or even medium pressure steam or other suitable heated medium may accordingly be required by the second distillation column reboiler 60.
Although
For example,
Energy savings can be 10% or more. In one example design, the number of stages or trays in column 52′ will be about 35% of the number in column 52 (
The reactor 16 may be of any suitable design for converting a paraffin to an olefin, with an example being a reactor that reacts the paraffin with a catalyst to convert it. A dehydrogenation reactor is another example which may find particular utility in the conversion of propane to propylene. Because many different reactor designs will be useful in different invention embodiments, the reactor 16 has been illustrated as a functional block.
The embodiment of distillation column section 12″ also includes second reboiler 38 which uses heat from HPC output stream 36 to heat a light recycle stream 82 which contains lighter, lower boiling point, shorter chain components than heavy recycle stream 78. Light recycle stream 82 is withdrawn at a distillation column location that is between the location of the distillation column bottom stream 74 removal and below the location of distillation column overhead stream 72 removal. This location may be set as desired to control the quality of the light recycle stream 82 so that it can be heated using HPC second output stream 36. As discussed above, various design parameters may be manipulated (including flow rate, temperature, reboiler 38 design, composition, and others) to ensure that light recycle stream 82 can effectively extract heat from the HPC second output stream 36. In many (but not all) embodiments, this light recycle stream 82 will have boiling point, propane content, temperature, and other qualities that are consistent with those of first distillation column bottom stream 56 illustrated in
The process embodiment illustrated by
The splitter overhead stream 27 from the splitter 26 is fed to a separator 100 where liquid phase propylene separates from vapor phase. The separator 100 may be a compressor suction drum that settles out liquid droplets from the splitter overhead stream 27 (which is largely in vapor phase) upstream of the HPC 32. A heavier propylene splitter bottom stream 98 is extracted from the splitter 26 and used as desired, and in some embodiments may be communicated to first distillation column 50 (not illustrated in
HPC 32 is designed to compress the splitter overhead vapor stream 27′ as at the chosen operating pressure (which is efficient for separation of propane and propylene by distillation). In many but not all embodiments, propylene could not be condensed by economic means as by exchange with cooling water or ambient air. In many embodiments, HPC 32 is a two stage compressor. In a first stage, the splitter overhead stream 27′ is compressed to a first pressure, and in a second stage compressed to a higher pressure. The splitter overhead stream 27′ may exit the separator 100 at various temperatures and pressures as may be appropriate in various operating circumstances. In some embodiments, the vapor splitter overhead stream 27′ is at a pressure of about 7 kg/cm2. In some embodiments, the first stage of the HPC 32 compresses the vapor splitter overhead stream 27′ to about double its pressure, or about 14 kg/cm2. This hot vapor of these embodiments has a condensation temperature of 33° C.
In embodiments such as that illustrated in
In some embodiments, this HPC second output stream 36 is increased to about twice the pressure of the HPC first output stream 34. In some embodiments, the HPC second output stream 36 is increased to about 30 kg/cm2 which increases the condensation temperature of the vapor to about 68° C. This makes the HPC first output stream 34 useful for reboiler duty in the distillation column section 12 (
It will be appreciated that various embodiments of the invention as described herein provide significant advantages and benefits over the prior art. In particular, significant energy and cost savings are achieved. Overall energy consumption is estimated to be reduced by 10% or more. Savings will vary with application scale and energy costs, but for a commercial scale process savings of from $1-$5 million US can be realized at current energy prices.
It will further be appreciated that description of example elements and embodiments has been made herein for the purposes of illustrating examples of the invention only, and that such description is not intended to limit the scope of the claimed invention. It will readily be appreciated that variations, combinations, alterations, subtractions and additions to the example embodiments listed herein can easily be made. When considering the various example embodiments and process flow diagrams presented herein, it will be appreciated that some discussion of aspects of the process that are not important to invention embodiments have been omitted for the sake of brevity. For example, various reactors, heat exchangers, piping configurations and other process aspects may be illustrated and discussed without reference to scale. The invention is not limited to any particular scale, although some embodiments may be so directed. Also, illustration and discussion of various valves and other traditional aspects of a process may have been omitted when they are not important to the scope of the invention embodiment. Although discussion and specific examples of invention embodiments useful for practice with production of propylene from propane have been made, many other embodiments may find utility with conversion of other paraffins to other olefins.