This invention relates to methods and installations for the backup supply of a pressurized gas by vaporization of cryogenic liquids, in particular those used for supplying customers with gaseous products (nitrogen, oxygen, argon) when the industrial installations (such as air separation units) can ensure only partial supply of the product, or even no supply at all (for example in the event of trip-out, load reduction for an electricity tariff constraint, etc.). The invention also applies to the storage of other cryogenic liquids, such as hydrogen, helium and carbon monoxide.
Partial oxidation reactors require a supply of high-pressure (25 bar and higher) oxygen with a pressure stabilized to ±1% of the nominal value. Air separation units supplying oxygen must therefore comply with this constraint, irrespective of their operating mode and in particular in the event of the air separation unit shutting down. In this case, a system comprising a liquid oxygen storage tank, cryogenic pumps and a steam-heated vaporizer ensure the delivery stream.
An backup vaporizer is illustrated in EP-A-0 452 177 in which liquid nitrogen coming from a storage tank is vaporized in an auxiliary vaporizer by heat exchange with the ambient air.
EP-A-0 628 778 discloses a cryogenic liquid storage tank in which the liquid is pumped and then vaporized in a vaporizer before being sent to the customer.
EP-A-0 756 144 discloses a cryogenic liquid storage tank, the liquid of which is pumped and then vaporized in a vaporizer before being sent to the customer.
“Large Oxygen Plant Economics and Reliability” by W. J. Scharle, Bulletin Y-143, National Fertilizer Division Center, Tennessee Valley Authority, Muscle Shoals, Ala. and “Oxygen Facilities for Synthetic Fuel Projects” by W. J. Scharle and K. Wilson, Journal of Engineering for Industry, November 1981, Vol. 103, pp. 409-417 describe a backup oxygen production system composed of:
On leaving this equipment, the gas is in general close to the ambient temperature and is sent to the customer. Depending on the energy sources available on the site and their costs, this exchanger may use for example air, steam, or natural gas to vaporize the pressurized liquid.
One of the main features of these backup installations is their start-up time. This is particularly important as it determines the quality and the continuity of the gas supply to customers. An excessively long start-up time after tripping of the production unit may cause too great a pressure drop in the line and may generate malfunctions in customer processes.
In the case of the oxygen production systems described in the above articles, a gaseous oxygen buffer tank is provided in order to supply the pressurized product during the time needed to bring the pump into operation (about 15 to 20 minutes according to the abovementioned articles by W. J. Scharle).
Conventionally, if the vaporization pump is permanently maintained at cryogenic temperature, the time needed for the backup system to reach 100% of its capacity in a stable manner is around 5 minutes, made up by 1 to 2 minutes for the pump to start up and 2 to 3 minutes for the vaporization exchanger to come up to speed. A judicious choice of the various components (short pipes between the pump and the storage tank and between the pump and the exchanger) makes it possible to reduce this time to 3 minutes. In certain cases, this time of 3 minutes is still too long as regards constraints on permitted pressure fluctuation in the line—in this case, as described above, one solution consists in installing, downstream of the exchanger, gas buffer tanks pressurized for example at 200 bar and dimensioned to supply the production for 1 to 3 minutes, the time that the system made up of the pump and the vaporizer requires to reach its normal operating speed. The drawback of this solution is its high price for installing a high-pressure tank, an oxygen expansion station and an oxygen compression system. The latter is provided by a piston compressor or more generally by another backup vaporization unit with very high-pressure piston pumps and large-volume/high-pressure atmospheric vaporization hairpin, pump for filling the buffer tanks, etc.
The start-up of a backup vaporization unit requires a certain amount of time. To start up the cryogenic pumps (which are kept cold) requires about 1 minute, and likewise the vaporization hairpin cannot come into steady-state operation instantaneously.
During the time to bring the backup vaporization unit into service, the pressure in the customer's network will drop, following a curve whose slope depends on the volume of water in the network and on the flow consumed. Therefore the low pressure limit (−1%) may be rapidly reached (in less than 5 seconds) if the length of the customer's network is less than one kilometer.
It is therefore necessary to have an oxygen supply system that provides the necessary flow to the customer during start-up of the pumps.
One subject of the invention is a method of supplying a pressurized gas, in which:
According to other, optional features:
According to a preferred mode of operation:
According to other, optional aspects:
Another subject of the invention is an installation for supplying a pressurized, comprising:
According to other aspects of the invention:
The invention will be described in greater detail with reference to FIGS. 1 to 6, which are diagrams showing the principle of a cryogenic separation unit and of a backup gas supply unit operating according to the method of the invention.
The air separation unit is designed to supply a stream 31 of pressurized gaseous oxygen. Now, if this stream is interrupted, in the event of the unit breaking down, or is insufficient, it is necessary to produce a backup gas 29 by vaporizing liquid oxygen stored in a storage tank 9. The liquid oxygen is stored at low pressure, being pressurized by an emergency pump 11 and vaporized against a flow of steam in a vaporizer 27.
The air separation unit produces a liquid oxygen stream 15, which is pressurized by a pump 12 to a pressure P1 and divided into two. A first stream 17 passes through an open valve V5, vaporizes in the exchange line 7 and passes through the open valve V6. This stream constitutes the production 31 of the air separation unit sent to the customer. The valve V5 serves to throttle the delivery of the pump 12, the head loss in the valve V5 being slightly greater than the hydraulic height of a vertical pipe 13 to which the second liquid stream 19 feeds via the valve V1.
The vertical pipe 13 installed in the cold box extends over the entire height H of the cold box 33 so as to be substantially above a vaporizer 27. The diameter of the vertical pipe 13 is defined so as to store a sufficient volume of high-pressure cryogenic fluid that corresponds to 1 minute's supply of high-pressure oxygen gas to the customer. It is very easy to find large-diameter cryogenic pipes resistant to very high pressures. Of course, the moment that the pipe contains the required amount of liquid, in order to provide the backup gas supply during start-up of the pump 11, the pipe may be shorter or slightly longer than the height of the highest component of the cold box (for example, the top of the low-pressure column or argon column).
In normal operation, this pipe is coursed by a small stream of high-pressure liquid at pressure P1 coming from pump 12 of the pump unit (via the valve V1). The liquid is then expanded (through the valve V2) and sent into the bottom of the low-pressure column via the upline 23 so that the liquid is continuously in circulation. This circulation is needed in order to ensure that the pipe 13 is fully filled with fresh cryogenic liquid.
The pressure Pm of the gas in the main 17, 31 is below the pressure P1 at the upper end of the vertical pipe 13, the difference being essentially equal to the head loss in the exchange line 7. Obviously, the pressure P2 at the lower end of the vertical pipe is higher than the pressure P1 and equal to P1+ρgH, if the pipe extends over the entire height of the cold box.
In the case of
When the air separation unit is shut down, as seen in
However, the pump is not essential since, as may be seen in
In the event of the air separation unit shutting down, the valves V3 and V4 are opened, the valves V1 and V2 are closed and the fresh liquid contained in the pipe 13 flows via the line 25 to the vaporizer 27 in order to provide the backup gas production with the pump 11 in operation.
The invention has been described in relation to a double air separation column, but it is easy to see that it applies to a single column containing many theoretical trays, a triple column, or a column system that includes an argon column.
The separation unit may separate air by cryogenic distillation, by permeation, by adsorption or any other known means.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03/06511 | May 2003 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR04/01184 | 5/14/2004 | WO | 11/28/2005 |