The present invention relates to a method for producing (meth)acrylic acid or (meth)acrolein by a gas phase catalytic oxidation of at least one substance to be oxidized selected from propylene, propane, isobutylene and (meth)acrolein with a molecular oxygen using a multi-tubular reactor stably and efficiently.
(Meth)acrylic acid or (meth)acrolein is produced by a gas phase catalytic oxidation reaction in which propylene, propane, isobutylene or (meth)acrolein is brought into contact with a molecular oxygen or a molecular oxygen-containing gas in the presence of a composite oxide catalyst. This gas phase catalytic oxidation reaction is conducted usually with a multi-tubular reactor.
In such a reaction system, it is a matter of course that it is desirable to obtain an intended material stably at a high yield.
Based on the findings obtained newly by inventors of this invention, the (meth)acrylic acid or (meth)acrolein can be obtained stably at a high yield by using a certain contrivance at the time of a start-up of the reaction described above.
As a contrivance at the time of a start-up in a reaction system employing a catalytic gas phase oxidation reactor, a start-up method which is safe and can recycle its exhausted gas is proposed in Patent Reference 1 (JP-A-2001-53519). Patent Reference 2 (JP-A-2003-265948) also proposes a method for effecting a start-up efficiently without any adverse effect on the activity of a catalyst in a shell-tube type reactor which circulates a heat medium which is solid at ambient temperature.
An object of the present invention is to provide a method for producing (meth)acrylic acid or (meth)acrolein by conducting a gas phase catalytic oxidation reaction with an oxygen-containing gas using as a raw material at least one substance to be oxidized selected from propylene, propane, isobutylene and (meth)acrolein using a multi-tubular reactor, which enables a high yield and stable production even when operating constantly with supplying the raw material in the maximum supply amount acceptable by the reactor or an amount close thereto.
The inventors of this invention discovered that (meth)acrylic acid or (meth)acrolein can be produced more stably at a higher yield by employing a procedure in which, at the time of a start-up of the reaction, for a period of at least 20 hours or more after the supply amount of the raw material per unit time (hereinafter sometimes simply referred to as “supply amount”) reached 30% or more of the acceptable maximum supply amount of the raw material to the reactor undergoing a stationary operation, the supply amount of the raw material is kept at the amount less than 80% of the acceptable maximum supply amount, and have achieved this invention based on this finding.
Thus, this invention is a method for producing (meth)acrylic acid or (meth)acrolein by conducting a gas phase catalytic oxidation reaction with an oxygen-containing gas using as a raw material at least one substance to be oxidized selected from propylene, propane, isobutylene and (meth)acrolein using a multi-tubular reactor, wherein, at the time of a start-up of the reaction, for a period of at least 20 hours or more after the supply amount of the raw material to the reactor per unit time reached 30% or more of the acceptable maximum supply amount of the raw material per unit time, the supply amount of the raw material per unit time is kept at 30% or more and less than 80% of the acceptable maximum supply amount.
In a prior method for producing acrolein for example from propylene, about 20 hours is required, at the time of the start-up, for raising the propylene supply amount from 30% to 100% of the acceptable maximum supply amount to the reactor.
Based on the inventors' researches, a conventional start-up allows some reaction tube to exhibit an abnormally elevated temperature, followed by a reduction in temperature (a rapid increase in the peak temperature followed by the loss of the temperature peak is observed by using a thermocouple). Such findings mean that a part which exhibits a specifically high activity (hereinafter referred to as an activity specific point) is present in the layer of a catalyst packed in a reaction tube and this activity specific point exhibits a high reactivity at the time of a start-up to cause a rapid increase in the temperature by which a surrounding catalyst is affected to result in a deactivation of the catalyst in the entire reaction tube (a loss of the temperature peak). Actually, when initiating the reaction by a conventional start-up and conducting a stationary operation with the acceptable maximum supply amount or a supply amount close thereto, the reaction yield was reduced by about 4% and the differential pressure between the inlet and the outlet of a deactivated reaction tube was higher by 3 times or more than that of a normal reaction tube. Such a deactivated reaction tube still remained at a frequency of about 5% after the stationary operation for one year.
On the contrary, when a time period during which the propylene supply amount is kept at 30% or more and less than 80%, for example kept at 70% of the acceptable maximum supply amount after reaching 30% of the acceptable maximum supply amount was 20 hours or more, for example, 10 days, according to a method of the invention, there was no reaction tube exhibiting an abnormally elevated temperature as described above. A subsequent stationary operation with the acceptable maximum supply amount or a supply amount close thereto for one year resulted in the differential pressure between the inlet and the outlet of a reaction tube which was same to that at the time of the initiation of the operation, with the catalytic activity being stable without undergoing any deactivation. The reaction yield was improved to about 2% when compared with a prior art. This may be attributable to a sufficient time period provided until a stationary operation near the acceptable maximum supply amount, which allows an activity specific point to disappear without affecting a surrounding catalyst.
In this connection, the reference numerals 1b and 1c in the drawings are reaction tubes, 2 is a reactor, 3a and 3b are circular conduits, 3a′ and 3b′ are circular conduits, 4a is a product outlet, 4b is a raw material supply inlet, 5a and 5b are tube plates, 6a and 6b are holed baffles, 6a′ and 6b′ are holed baffles, 7 is a circulation pump, 8a and 8a′ are heat medium supply lines, 8b and 8b′ are heat medium draining line, 9 is an intermediate tube plate, 10 is a heat shielding plate, 11, 14 and 15 are thermometers, 12 is a stagnation space, and 13 is a spacer rod.
The invention is detailed below.
The method of the invention is a method for producing (meth)acrylic acid or (meth)acrolein by conducting a gas phase catalytic oxidation reaction using a multi-tubular reactor packed with a catalyst effecting a gas phase catalytic oxidation using as a raw material at least one substance to be oxidized selected from propylene, propane, isobutylene and (meth)acrolein, characterized in that a sufficient time period is provided until a stationary operation near the acceptable maximum supply amount by adjusting the raw material supply amount at the time of a start-up of the reaction.
As used herein, the term “acceptable maximum supply amount” means a maximum amount of a raw material allowed to be supplied to a reactor per unit time. This value correlates with the production capability of the reactor and determined at the stage of the designing of the reactor.
In the invention, at the time of a start-up of the reaction, for a period of at least 20 hours or more, preferably 24 hours or more and not more than 80 hours, after the supply amount reached 30% or more of the acceptable maximum supply amount, the supply amount of the raw material to the reactor is kept at 30% or more and less than 80%, preferably 50% or more and not more than 75%, as mentioned above. As a result, the effects of the invention can be exerted and the (meth)acrylic acid or the (meth)acrolein can be produced stably at an improved yield even when operating with the acceptable maximum supply amount.
The reaction systems, reactors, catalysts and the like employed in the invention are described below.
While a representative of the reaction systems in an industrial method for producing an acrolein and acrylic acid may for example be a one-path system, an unreacted propylene recycling system and a combustion exhaust gas recycling system, the invention is not limited to any reaction systems including these three systems.
In this system, propylene, air and steam are supplied as being mixed at a former stage reaction to convert mainly into an acrolein and acrylic acid, the outlet gas of which is supplied to a latter stage reaction (mainly converting the acrolein to the acrylic acid) without separating from the products. In this procedure, it is common to supply air and steam required in the reaction at the latter stage in addition to the outlet gas from the former stage, to the reaction at the latter stage.
In this system, the reaction product gas containing the acrylic acid obtained in the latter stage reaction is introduced into acrylic acid trapping device, where the acrylic acid is trapped as an aqueous solution, and a part of the exhausted gas containing unreacted propylene in this acrylic acid trapping device is supplied to the former stage reaction, whereby recycling a part of the unreacted propylene.
In this system, the reaction product gas containing the acrylic acid obtained in the latter stage reaction is introduced into acrylic acid trapping device, where the acrylic acid is trapped as an aqueous solution, all of the exhausted gas in this acrylic acid trapping device is combusted and oxidized to convert the contained unreacted propylene and the like mainly into carbon dioxide and water, and a part of the combusted exhausted gas thus obtained is added to the former stage reaction.
Generally, a multi-tubular reactor is used for the purpose of increasing the productivity of the reactor while protecting a catalyst and keeping the performance of the catalyst at a high level by controlling the catalyst reaction temperature precisely due to an extremely large exothermic heat as in an oxidation reaction.
Recently, the amount of the production of acrylic acid from propylene and methacrylic acid from isobutylene (together referred to as (meth)acrylic acid) was increased greatly in response to an increased demand, and a large number of plants were built in the world, with the plant production scale being increased to 100 thousand tons or more per plant per year. As a result of an increased plant production scale, the amount produced by a single oxidation reactor should be increased, resulting in an increased load of a gas phase catalytic oxidation reactor of propane, propylene or isobutylene. Accordingly, a multi-tubular reactor is needed to be imparted with a far higher performance.
In the invention, a method for a gas phase catalytic oxidation of a substance to be oxidized with a molecular oxygen-containing gas using a multi-tubular reactor having, in its longitudinal direction of the reaction tubes, a cylindrical reactor shell having a raw material supply inlet and a product outlet, a plural of circular conduits provided on the outer circumference of the cylindrical reactor shell for allowing a heat medium to come into or go out of the cylindrical reactor shell, a circulating device connecting the plurality of the circular conduits with each other, a plural of reaction tubes which are restrained by a plural of the tube plate of the reactor and which contain catalysts and a plural of baffles for changing the direction of the heat medium allowed to come into the reactor shell is employed, and the reaction tube described above is packed with an oxidation catalyst such as an Mo—Bi-based catalyst and/or an Mo—V-based catalyst.
The invention is a gas phase catalytic oxidation method which employs propylene, propane, isobutylene or (meth)acrolein or a mixture thereof as a substance to be oxidized and a gas phase catalytic oxidation is conducted using a molecular oxygen-containing gas to obtain (meth)acrolein or (meth)acrylic acid. (Meth)acrolein, (meth)acrylic acid or both are obtained from propylene, propane, isobutylene. (Meth)acrylic acid is obtained also from (meth)acrolein.
As used herein, a “process gas” means a gas involved in a gas phase catalytic oxidation reaction including a substance to be oxidized and a molecular oxygen-containing gas as raw material gases, resultant products and the like. A “raw material” means a substance to be oxidized.
To a multi-tubular reactor employed in a gas phase catalytic oxidation, a gas mixture of at least one substance to be oxidized selected from propylene, propane, isobutylene and (meth)acrolein, a molecular oxygen-containing gas and water vapor is mainly introduced as a raw material gas.
In the invention, the concentration of the substance to be oxidized in the raw material gas is 6 to 10% by mole, with the oxygen being in an amount of 1.5 to 2.5 molar times and the water vapor in an amount of 0.8 to 5 molar times that the substance to be oxidized. The raw material gas introduced passes through the reaction tubes as being divided into each reaction tube, and reacts in the presence of the packed oxidizing catalyst.
A gas phase catalytic oxidation reaction according to the invention which employs a multi-tubular reactor is a method employed widely for producing (meth)acrylic acid or (meth)acrolein using a molecular oxygen or a molecular oxygen-containing gas in the presence of a composite oxide catalyst from at least one substance to be oxidized selected from propylene, propane, isobutylene and (meth)acrolein.
A multi-tubular reactor employed in the invention is not limited particularly and may be one employed industrially.
One embodiment of a multi-tubular reactor employed in the invention is described with referring to
In a shell 2 of the multi-tubular reactor, reaction tubes 1b and 1c are fixed on tube plates 5a and 5b. A raw material supply inlet which is an inlet of raw material gas for the reaction and a product outlet which is an outlet of a product are 4a or 4b. While the direction of the flow of a process gas may be in any way when the flows of a process gas and a heat medium are countercurrents, 4b is the raw material supply inlet in
The temperature of the heat medium is adjusted so that the difference in the temperature between the heat medium supplying line 8a and the heat medium draining line 8b is 1 to 10° C., preferably 2 to 6° C., although it depends on the performance of the catalyst employed.
It is preferred to provide a current plate (not shown) on the body plate part inside of the circular conduits 3a and 3b for the purpose of minimizing the distribution of the heat medium flow speed toward the direction of the circumference. As the current plate, a porous plate or a slit plate is employed, and the opening area of the porous plate or the slit gap may be changed to achieve a rectification effect which allows the heat medium to come in at a similar flow speed from all over the circumference. The temperature inside the circular conduits (3a, preferably also 3b) can be monitored by providing a single or a plural of thermometers 15.
While the number of the baffles provided in the reactor shell is not limited particularly, it is preferable to provide three plates (2 plates of 6a type and 1 plate of 6b type) as in an ordinary case. By the existence of these baffles, the upward flow of the heat medium is prevented, and converted into a lateral direction with respect to the axial direction of the reactor tube, whereby allowing the heat medium to be collected from the circumference to the center of the reactor shell, and then to be turned around toward the circumference at the opening of the baffle 6a, then allowed to reach the outer cylinder of the shell. The heat medium is turned around again at the circumference of the baffles 6b to be collected into the center, and then goes upward through the openings of the baffles 6a to go along the upper tube plate 5a of the reactor shell toward the circumference, and then passes through the circular conduits 3b to circulate to the pump.
Into a plural of the reaction tubes provided in the reactor, the thermometers 11 are inserted, and the signals are transmitted to the outside of the reactor, and the temperature distribution in the catalyst layer in the direction of the reactor tube axis is recorded. In a plural of the reaction tubes having the thermometers inserted thereinto, a single thermometer can measure the temperature at 5 to 20 points in the direction of the tube axis.
A baffle employed in the invention may be any of a segment type chipped circular baffle shown in
As an ordinary baffle, a disc baffle shown in
While the distance between the respective baffles (the distance between the baffles 6a and 6b as well as the distance between the baffle 6a and the tube plates 5a, 5b) is frequently equal, it is not necessarily equal. It may be adjusted appropriately so that the required flow rate of the heat medium determined on the basis of the oxidation reaction heat generated in the reaction tubes is surely obtained and the pressure loss of the heat medium is low.
Since the temperature of the heat medium is different between the upper and lower areas (area A and area B in
For example, into the multi-tubular reactor employed in the invention shown in
An intermediate plate is shown in
Although the direction of the flow of the heat medium in the reactor shell is indicated upward by an arrow in
To prevent the formation of such a gas stagnation, a gas exhausting line should be provided to replace the gas in the gas layer with the heat medium. For this purpose, the heat medium pressure in the heat medium supplying line 8a is increased when the heat medium flows upward (
In a multi-tubular reactor which oxidizes propylene, propane or isobutylene with a molecular oxygen-containing gas, when the multi-tubular reactor shown in
Also when the multi-tubular reactor shown in
Also when the first stage of the multi-tubular reactor shown in
The inner diameter of a reaction tube having an effect on the gas line speed is extremely important, since the inside of the reaction tube containing an oxidation catalyst in an oxidation reactor is in a gas phase, and also since the gas line speed is limited due to a resistance by the catalyst and the heat transmission coefficient in the tube is the lowest and allows the heat transmission to be a rate determinant.
While the inner diameter of a reaction tube of a multi-tubular reactor according to the invention may vary depending on the reaction heat amount and the catalyst particle size in the reaction tube, it is preferably 10 to 50 mm, more preferably 20 to 30 mm. A too small inner diameter of the reaction tube leads to a reduced amount of the catalyst to be packed which leads to an increased number of the reaction tubes relative to the amount of the catalyst required, resulting in a requirement of a high production cost due to increased labor at the time of the reactor production which is disadvantageous in view of an industrial efficiency. On the other hand, a too large inner diameter of the reaction tube leads to a reduced surface area of the reaction tube relative to the amount of the catalyst required, resulting in a reduction in the heat transmission area for removing the reaction heat.
As a catalyst employed in a gas phase catalytic oxidation for producing (meth)acrylic acid or (meth)acrolein, there is one for a first stage reaction converting an olefin to an unsaturated aldehyde or an unsaturated acid and one for a second stage reaction converting an unsaturated aldehyde to an unsaturated acid.
In the gas phase catalytic oxidation reaction described above, an Mo—Bi-based composite oxidation catalyst employed in the first stage reaction mainly for producing acrolein (reaction for converting an olefin to an unsaturated aldehyde or an unsaturated acid) may for example be one represented by Formula (I) shown below:
MoaWbBicFedAeBfCgDhEiOx Formula (I)
In Formula (I) shown above, A denotes at least one element selected from nickel and cobalt, B denotes at least one element selected from sodium, potassium, rubidium, cesium and thallium, C denotes at least one element selected from alkaline earth metals, D denotes at least one element selected from phosphorus, tellurium, antimony, tin, cerium, lead, niobium, manganese, arsenic, boron and zinc, E denotes at least one element selected from silicon, aluminum, titanium and zirconium, and O denotes oxygen. a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i and x denotes the atomic ratios of Mo, W, Bi, Fe, A, B, C, D, E and O, respectively, and when a is 12 then b is 0 to 10, c is 0 to 10 (preferably 0.1 to 10), d is 0 to 10 (preferably 0.1 to 10), e is 0 to 15, f is 0 to 10 (preferably 0.001 to 10), g is 0 to 10, h is 0 to 4, i is 0 to 30, x is a value determined depending on the oxidation state of each element.
In the gas phase catalytic oxidation reaction described above, an Mo—V-based composite oxidation catalyst employed in the second stage reaction for oxidizing acrolein to produce acrylic acid (reaction for converting an unsaturated aldehyde to an unsaturated acid) may for example be one represented by Formula (II) shown below:
MOaVbWcCUdXeYfOg Formula (II)
In Formula (II) shown above, X denotes at least one element selected from Mg, Ca, Sr and Ba, Y denotes at least one element selected from Ti, Zr, Ce, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Zn, Nb, Sn, Sb, Pb and Bi, and O denotes oxygen. a, b, C, d, e, f and g denotes the atomic ratios of Mo, V, W, Cu, X, Y and O, respectively, and when a is 12 then b is 2 to 14, c is 0 to 12, d is 0 to 6, e is 0 to 3, 0 f is 0 to 3, and g is a value determined depending on the oxidation state of each element.
A catalyst described above may be produced by a method described for example in JP-A-63-54942, JP-B-6-13096, JP-B-6-38918 and the like.
A catalyst employed in the invention may be a molded catalyst obtained by an extrusion molding or a tablet compression, or may be a supported catalyst formed by allowing a composite oxides consisting of catalyst components to be supported on an inert carrier such as silicon carbide, alumina, zirconium oxide, titanium oxide and the like.
The shape of a catalyst employed in the invention is not limited particularly, and may be any shape such as sphere, column, cylinder, star and ring or may be amorphous.
A catalyst described above may be used as a mixture with an inert substance as a diluent.
While such an inert substance is not limited particularly as long as it is stable under a reaction condition and is not reactive with a raw material substance or a product, it is preferably one employed as a carrier for a catalyst, such as alumina, silicon carbide, silica, zirconium oxide, titanium oxide and the like.
Its shape is not limited particularly similarly to a catalyst, and may be any shape such as sphere, column, cylinder, star, ring, chip and network or may be amorphous. The size may be determined while taking the reaction tube diameter and the pressure loss into consideration.
The amount of an inert substance as a diluent may be determined appropriately based on the intended catalytic activity.
The activity of a catalyst layer in a reaction tube can be changed.
A method for the adjustment for changing the activity of a catalyst layer in a reaction tube may for example be a way to adjust the composition of the catalysts to give catalysts having different activities to be used in respective catalyst layers, or a way to mix a catalyst particle with an inert substance particle to dilute the catalyst whereby adjusting the activity of each catalyst layer.
In a typical example of the latter way, the catalyst layers consists of two layers, namely a low activity layer which is a catalyst layer at the inlet of the raw material gases in a reaction tube where an inert substance particle is contained at a higher level and the amount of the inert substance particle (ratio by mass) may for example be 0.3 to 0.7 based on the catalyst, and a high activity layer which is a catalyst layer at the outlet of the reaction tube where such a ratio is as low as 0 to 0.5 or a non-diluted catalyst is packed.
While the number of the catalyst layers formed in the direction of the tube axis of a multi-tubular reactor is not limited, the number of the catalyst layers is usually 1 to 10 since a too large number of the catalyst layers leads to a requirement of an enormous labor for packing the catalyst. The optimum length of each catalyst layer may vary depending on the catalyst type, the number of the catalyst layers, the reaction conditions and the like, and may be determined appropriately for allowing a maximum effect of the invention to be exerted.
An auxiliary matter of the invention is discussed below.
A step for producing acrylic acid may for example be the steps (i) to (iii) shown below. In any step, the technique described above is taken.
(i) An oxidation step for effecting a catalytic gas phase oxidation of propane, propylene and/or acrolein, a collection step for bringing an acrylic acid-containing gas from the oxidation step into contact with water to collect the acrylic acid as an aqueous solution of acrylic acid, an extraction step for extracting the acrylic acid from this aqueous solution of the acrylic acid using a suitable extraction solvent, and subsequent separation of the acrylic acid from the solvent followed by a purification step are provided, and then a high boiling fluid containing a Michael adduct of the acrylic acid and polymerization inhibitors employed in respective steps is supplied as a raw material to a decomposition reaction tower to recover valuable materials (for example, acrylic acid) and the valuable materials are supplied to any step of the collection step or later steps.
(ii) An oxidation step for effecting a catalytic gas phase oxidation of propylene, propane and/or acrolein to produce acrylic acid, a collection step for bringing an acrylic acid-containing gas into contact with water to collect the acrylic acid as an aqueous solution of acrylic acid, an azeotropic separation step for distilling this aqueous solution of the acrylic acid in an azeotropic separation tower in the presence of an azeotropic solvent to collect a crude acrylic acid from the tower bottom, and then an acetic acid separation step for removing acetic acid, followed by a purification step for removing high boiling impurities are provided, and then a high boiling fluid containing a Michael adduct of the acrylic acid and polymerization inhibitors employed in these production steps is supplied as a raw material to a decomposition reaction tower to recover valuable materials (for example, acrylic acid) and the valuable materials are supplied to any step of the collection step or later steps.
(iii) An oxidation step for effecting a catalytic gas phase oxidation of propylene, propane and/or acrolein to produce acrylic acid, a collection/separation step for bringing an acrylic acid-containing gas into contact with an organic solvent to collect the acrylic acid as an organic solution of acrylic acid while removing water, acetic acid and the like simultaneously, a separation step for isolating the acrylic acid from this organic solution of the acrylic acid, a step in which a high boiling fluid containing polymerization inhibitors employed in these production steps, organic solvents and a Michael adduct of the acrylic acid is supplied as a raw material to a decomposition reaction tower to recover valuable materials and the valuable materials are supplied to any step of the collection step or later, and a step for purifying a part of the organic solvent are provided.
A step for producing an acrylate consists for example of an esterification reaction step for reacting acrylic acid with an alcohol using an organic acid or a cationic ion exchange resin as a catalyst and a purification step for conducting extraction, evaporation and distillation each as a unit operation for condensing the crude acrylate solution obtained in the reaction. Each unit operation may be selected appropriately based on the ratio of the acrylic acid and the alcohol as raw materials in the esterification reaction, the type of the catalyst employed for the esterification reaction, or the physical properties of the raw materials, reaction by-products and acrylates. Through respective unit operations, a product is obtained in an acrylate purification tower. The fluid on the bottom of the purification tower may be supplied to a decomposition reaction tower as a high boiling fluid containing a Michael adduct whose main components are acrylates, β-acryloxypropionates, β-alkoxypropionates, β-hydroxypropionates together with polymerization inhibitors employed in the production steps, or may be returned to the process whereby recovering the valuable materials.
In the production of acrylic acid or acrylates which are readily polymerizable compounds, a polymerization inhibitor is employed to suppress the formation of the polymers during the production.
Typically, such a polymerization inhibitor may for example be copper acrylate, copper dithiocarbamate, phenolic compounds, phenothiazine compounds and the like. The copper dithiocarbamate may for example be a copper dialkyldithiocarbamate such as copper dimethyldithiocarbamate, copper diethyldithiocarbamate, copper dipropyldithiocarbamate, copper dibutyldithiocarbamate and the like, a copper cycloalkylenedithiocarbamate such as copper ethylenedithiocarbamate, copper tetramethylene dithiocarbamate, copper pentamethylene dithiocarbamate, copper hexamethylenedithiocarbamate and the like, and a copper cyclooxydialkylenedithiocarbamate such as copper oxydiethylenedithiocarbamate and the like. The phenolic compound may for example be hydroquinone, methoquinone, pyrogallol, cathecol, resorcine, phenol, cresol and the like. The phenothiazine compound may for example be phenothiazine, bis(α-methylbenzyl)phenothiazine, 3,7-dioctylphenothiazine, bis(α-dimethylbenzyl)phenothiazine and the like.
While substances other than those listed above may be involved in some processes, their types clearly have no effects on the invention.
Acrylic acid or acrylates thus obtained can be used in various applications. Typically, it may be used in a highly absorptive resin, coagulant, pressure-sensitive adhesive, paint, adhesive, fiber modifier and the like.
The invention is further described in the following Example and Comparative Example which are not intended to restrict the invention.
94 Parts by mass of antimony paramolybdate was dissolved in 400 parts by mass of pure water with heating. On the other hand, 7.2 parts by mass of ferric nitrate, 25 parts by mass of cobalt nitrate and 38 parts by mass of nickel nitrate were dissolved in 60 parts by mass of pure water with heating. These solutions were mixed with stirring thoroughly to obtain a slurry solution.
Then, 0.85 parts by mass of borax and 0.36 parts by mass of potassium nitrate were dissolved in 40 parts by mass of pure water with heating and then added to the slurry described above. Then 64 parts by mass of particulate silica was added and stirred. Then 58 parts by mass of bismuth subcarbonate which had previously be made composite with 0.8% by mass of Mg was added and mixed with stirring, and this slurry was died with heating, and then heat-treated for 1 hour at 300° C. in air atmosphere, and the resultant particulate solid was subjected to tablet compression using a molding machine into tablets each being 5 mm in diameter and 4 mm in height, and then sintered for 4 hours at 500° C. to obtain a former stage catalyst.
The former stage catalyst thus obtained was an Mo—Bi-based composite oxide having the composition ratio of a catalyst powder whose formula was Mo12Bi5Ni3Co2Fe0.4Na0.2Mg0.4B0.2K0.1Si24Ox (the oxygen composition ratio x is a value determined depending on the oxidation state of each metal.
(Production of Acrylic Acid and Acrolein from Propylene)
In this Example, a multi-tubular reactor similar to that shown in
Typically, a multi-tubular reactor of a reaction shell (inner diameter: 4,500 mm) having 10,000 stainless steel-made reaction tube each being 3.5 m in length and 27 mm in inner diameter was employed. No reaction tube was provided in the round opening region in the center of a holed disc baffle 6a having an opening near the center of the reactor shell. The baffles consisted of holed disc baffles 6a each having an opening near the center of the reactor shell and a holed disc baffle 6b which formed a gap between the circumference of the reactor, which were located at equal intervals in the order of 6a-6b-6a, with the opening ratio of each baffle being 18%.
A catalyst to be packed in each reaction tube was obtained by mixing the former stage catalyst described above with silica-made balls each having no catalytic activity and being 5 mm in diameter to adjust the catalytic activity, and packed in such a manner that the ratio of the catalytic activities became 0.5, 0.7 and 1 from the inlet of the reaction tube, whereby forming three catalyst layers.
A heat medium (NITER) which was an inorganic mixed salt was passed through the side of the reactor shell to keep the temperature at 330° C. Prior to the supply of propylene, 1845 Nm3/hr of oxygen, 8241 Nm3/hr of nitrogen and 1107 Nm3/hr of water vapor were supplied to the reactor and then the catalytic layer temperature was ensured to be almost similar to that of the NITER, and thereafter the supply of propylene was started.
The propylene supply was reached 340 Nm3/hr 2 hours after the start, and then the supply amount was increased by 50 Nm3/hr per hour to reach 775 Nm3/hr (corresponding to about 70% of the maximum supply amount) about 11 hours after the start. The NITER temperature was kept at 330° C. for 12 hours.
Then the propylene supply amount was increased over about 70 minutes until 830 Nm3/hr (corresponding to 75% of the maximum supply amount). The NITER temperature was kept at 331° C. for 24 hours.
Then the propylene supply amount was increased over about 200 minutes until 996 Nm3/hr (corresponding to 90% of the maximum supply amount), and the NITER temperature was kept at 333° C. for 4 hours, followed by an elevation to 1107 Nm3/hr (corresponding to 100% of the maximum supply amount) over about 130 minutes, and then the NITER temperature was set at 335° C. for switching into a stationary operation.
At this time, the raw material gas composition consisted of 9% by mole of propylene, 15% by mole of oxygen, 9% by mole of water vapor, 67% by mole of nitrogen, with the pressure being 75 kPa (gauge pressure) and the gas supply amount being 12300 Nm3/hr.
When operating for a prolonged period, the NITER temperature was adjusted so that the % propylene conversion became 97%. The NITER temperature after 1 year was 337° C. During this period, the total yield of acrolein and acrylic acid was 92%.
One year after this stationary operation, the reactor was opened and 84 reaction tubes in total were removed from the regions near the center of the reactor shell, near the periphery and intermediate zone inside the shell at an almost same radial angle, and examined macroscopically, and no abnormality was observed in each removed catalyst.
The procedure similar to that in Example 1 including the stationary operation was conducted except for setting the propylene supply amount at 1107 Nm3/hr (corresponding to 100% of the maximum supply amount) within 15 hours after the start. The NITER temperature was targeted to a temperature corresponding to the maximum supply amount ratio in Example 1.
Once the propylene supply amount exceeded 900 Nm3/hr, the temperature of the catalyst layers could not be kept at a constant value. Since the NITER temperature became impossible to be kept at a prescribed temperature, it was set at a temperature lower by 1 to 2° C. After the propylene supply amount became 1107 Nm3/hr and the temperature of the catalyst layers became stable, the NITER temperature was set at 335° C. to terminate the start-up operation.
The % propylene conversion in the stationary state was not higher than 96.5%, and the total yield of acrolein and acrylic acid was 89%.
Since the % propylene conversion was low during the stationary operation, the operation was discontinued after 1 month, and the reactor was opened and the reaction tubes were removed and examined in the manner similar to that in Example 1 described above. As a result of the examination, a part of the catalyst removed from the reaction tubes near the center of the reactor and near the circumference of the reactor exhibited a deactivation which was observed macroscopically (the condition similar to the color and the shape (shrinkage) shown empirically by a deactivated catalyst).
While the invention has been described in detail with reference to specific embodiments thereof, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made therein without departing from the spirit and the scope thereof.
This application is based on the Japanese patent application filed on May 26, 2004 (Patent Application No. 2004-155840), the entire contents thereof being hereby incorporated by reference.
According to a production method of the invention, (meth)acrylic acid or (meth)acrolein can be produced at a higher yield and more stably even when supplying the raw material in an amount close to the maximum supply amount acceptable by a reactor. The resultant acrylic acid or acrylates can be used in a highly absorptive resin, coagulant, pressure-sensitive adhesive, paint, adhesive, fiber modifier and the like.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-155840 | May 2004 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP04/16789 | 11/5/2004 | WO | 00 | 1/30/2007 |