The invention relates to a reactor and a process employing said reactor for endothermic gas phase reactions over a solid catalyst. Said reactor is particularly suitable for catalytic reforming and for hydrocarbon dehydrogenation reactions.
The present invention relates to a reactor which can recover heat from pressurized combustion gas and use it for reactions.
The process uses a combustion gas under pressure to heat the reactor by indirect heat exchange inside the reactor.
Heavy gasoline cuts (80-180° C.) principally comprising C6 to C10 hydrocarbons deriving from the initial distillation of oil is normally processed to bring their octane number to a high value for use in an automotive vehicle engine.
The catalytic reforming process can carry out that operation. That process consists of passing the gasoline cut, in the presence of hydrogen, over a catalyst including precious metals at a high temperature (close to 500° C.). The catalytic reforming reactions principally consist of dehydrogenating naphthenes and paraffins present in the feed to transform them into aromatics which have a high octane number and to isomerize the remaining paraffins to additionally increase the octane number of the gasoline. A first unwanted reaction is cracking, which produces light hydrocarbons such as methane, ethane, propane and butane and which reduces the yield of the operation. A second unwanted reaction is coking of the catalyst, which reduces the activity of the catalyst and necessitates its periodic regeneration by burning the coke to re-establish its activity. Cracking is greater with increased pressure. Thus, the yields are better at low pressure. However, coking is higher with a lower partial pressure of hydrogen.
Old units operated at high pressure (approximately 15 to 30 bars), with a high hydrogen recycle ratio, giving mediocre yields, and could operate for approximately 11 months before the catalyst had to be regenerated.
Continuous catalyst regeneration units can regenerate all of a catalyst in a few days, to allow low pressure operation (approximately 3 to 5 bars), and thus increase the yields. The catalyst moves continuously in the reactors, which are thus radial in type, and is sent to a regeneration section in order to be regenerated before being returned to the first reactor. Dehydrogenation reactions are highly endothermic and the reactions stop when the temperature is too low. Current processes generally comprise three or four reactors and as many furnaces in series. Each furnace is followed by a reactor. Because of the high temperatures, the furnace yields are low and it is normal to produce steam to improve the overall yield of the furnace. It is also normal to use that steam to actuate a turbine which drives the recycle compressor and the hydrogen exportation compressor. Recently, it has become more usual to use a variable speed electric motor for the compressors and less steam is used in modern refineries which for economic reasons tend to prefer using electricity. For that reason, the use of large size furnaces which generate steam with the associated operation and maintenance problems is now considered to be a drawback of the process.
Other hydrocarbon dehydrogenation processes such as long chain paraffin dehydrogenation use a process which is identical to catalytic reforming and suffer from the same problems.
The invention concerns a reactor for catalytic reforming or for hydrocarbon dehydrogenation, having a cylindrical shape along a vertical axis, an upper head and a lower bottom, comprising at least two annular zones centred on the vertical axis, said two annular zones being a zone termed a catalytic zone and a zone termed the exchange zone. Vertical hermetic panels divide the reactor into sectors, said sectors each comprising at least one exchange section and at least one catalytic section, the ensemble of said exchange sections forming the exchange zone and the ensemble of said catalytic sections forming the catalytic zone.
The invention also concerns the process using the reactor of the invention.
In order to heat the reactor, preferably a reforming reactor, the present invention generally employs pressurized combustion gases which means that electricity can be produced for the catalytic reforming unit, and possibly for other units. A single reactor is generally used, with special internal means which mean that the sections for heating by exchange with the combustion gas can be alternated with the adiabatic catalytic sections, with the catalyst being able to move in the reactor under gravity. The overall footprint of the unit, the amount of equipment and the cost of the reaction section are thus reduced.
If the reactor dimensions are too large, then in the case of very large capacities, several reactors of this type may be present, preferably in parallel.
Each reactor is then generally supplied by a dedicated air compressor and a dedicated burner.
Throughout the text, 1 bar is equivalent to 0.1 MPa.
The invention concerns a reactor for carrying out an endothermic gas phase reaction in the gas phase, having a cylindrical shape along a vertical axis and comprising:
In the context of the invention, the first sector is defined as the sector in which the reactor is supplied with reaction mixture. The other sectors are termed the second sector, third sector up to the last sector, following the order in which the reaction mixture moves in the reactor. As an example, in the case of 4 sectors, the first sector is that to which the reaction mixture is supplied to the reactor. The reaction mixture then moves in succession in said first sector then in the second sector, then in the third sector then in the last sector before being evacuated from the reactor.
In a preferred implementation, the catalytic zone and the exchange zone are in succession from the edge towards the centre of the reactor.
In a preferred implementation, at least four annular zones centred on the vertical axis are in succession from the edge towards the centre of the reactor, namely a first zone 201 termed the supply zone, a second zone 202 termed the catalytic zone, a third zone 203 termed the collection zone and a fourth zone 204 termed the exchange zone. In this variation, the vertical hermetic panels 65 dividing the reactor into sectors are fixed along a central cylindrical zone 205. In general, the sectors each comprise an exchange section 61, a catalytic section 62, a supply section 161 and a collection section 162, the ensemble of said exchange sections forming the exchange zone 204, the ensemble of said catalytic sections forming the catalytic zone 202, the ensemble of said supply sections forming the supply zone 201 and the ensemble of said collection sectors forming the collection zone 203, In general, the reactor comprises an upper head and a lower bottom.
At least one pipe 163 per section generally passes through the upper head of the reactor to supply the catalytic sections with catalyst and at least one pipe 263 per section passes through the lower bottom of the reactor to evacuate catalyst from the catalytic sections. In general, a supply conduit 17 passing through the upper head of the reactor can supply a sector, denoted the first sector, with reaction mixture, an evacuation conduit 18 passing through the upper head of the reactor can evacuate reaction mixture from the last sector of the reactor. A conduit 67 which connects the collection zone of the last sector to the conduit 18 in order to evacuate the reaction mixture is generally present. In this same variation, an inlet conduit 6 passing through the lower bottom of the reactor is connected to conduits 70 leading to tubular chambers 71. Said tubular chambers distribute combustion gas by means of tubular plates 69 via the bottom of the reactor into each exchange section. Tubular chambers 72 can collect combustion gas from the top of each exchange section, then conduits 73 provided with expansion bellows 74 can evacuate the combustion gas towards the outlet conduit 7 which passes through the upper head of the reactor.
Each exchange section is generally constituted by tubular exchangers or plate exchangers. Each exchange section has either an identical surface area, or the exchange surface area increases from the first to the last exchange section.
Each catalytic section is generally formed by two concentric metal screens, preferably of the “Johnson screen” type. All of the catalytic sections generally have the same dimensions or the dimensions of the catalytic sections increase from the first to the last sector.
The vertical hermetic panels 65 generally divide the reactor into 3, 4, 6 or 8 sectors, preferably into 4 or 6 sectors.
In a highly preferred embodiment, a conduit (64) connects the collection section of each sector, with the exception of the last sector, to the exchange section of the following sector.
The invention also concerns the process for carrying out a catalytic reforming reaction or hydrocarbon dehydrogenation reaction in a reactor in accordance with the invention.
The invention also concerns a process for carrying out an endothermic gas phase catalytic reforming or hydrocarbon dehydrogenation reaction over a solid catalyst in a reactor in accordance with the highly preferred embodiment of the invention, in which the reaction mixture enters the reactor via the conduit 17 then moves from top to bottom in the first exchange section 61. Said reaction mixture then passes under the first catalytic section 62 between the catalyst down pipes 263, then passes radially through the first catalytic section 62, passing from the supply zone 201 to the collection zone 203 of the reactor, passes to the exchange section of the second sector via the conduit 64. Finally, the reaction mixture moves in succession and in alternating manner in the next exchange sections and the next catalytic sections.
The catalyst generally moves from top to bottom at the same speed in all the catalytic sections. The catalyst can move from top to bottom at a speed which increases from the first to the last catalytic section.
The invention also concerns the process in which the pressurized combustion gas heats the reaction mixture by indirect heat exchange.
In a first variation of combustion gas production, the combustion gas supplying the reactor 60 via the conduit 6 derives from heating air at atmospheric pressure moving via line 1 to an air compressor 2 then via the line 3 towards a combustion chamber 4 in which burning a fuel gas moving via 5 can heat the combustion gas to a temperature in the range 600° C. to 800° C., preferably in the range 650° C. to 750° C.
In a second variation of combustion gas production, the combustion gas supplying the reactor 60 via the conduit 6 derives from heating air at atmospheric pressure moving via the line 1 towards an air compressor 2 then via the line 3 towards a combustion chamber 4 in which burning of a fuel gas moving via the line 5 can heat the combustion air which then passes via an expansion turbine 12 which is on the same shaft as the air compressor and which provides the power necessary for compression; the combustion gas leaving the expansion turbine 12 is at a pressure in the range 0.2 to 0.45 MPa, and at a temperature in the range 600° C. to 800° C., and preferably in the range 650° C. to 750° C.
In each of the two combustion gas production variations, the combustion gas leaving the reactor via the conduit 7 can be reheated in a combustion chamber 8 before being sent to a turbo-expander 10 to produce electricity.
The reaction mixture enters via a line 17 and leaves via a line 18. The combustion gas cools by exchange with the reaction mixture which is undergoing an endothermic catalytic reforming reaction.
At the reactor outlet, the cooled gas is sent via a line 7 to a second combustion chamber 8 where it is reheated by combustion of fuel gas supplied via a line 9. At the outlet from the combustion chamber, the hot gas is sent at a temperature close to 750° C. to a turbo-expander 10 which drives an alternator 11 to produce electricity.
The reaction mixture enters via a line 17 and leaves via a line 18. The combustion gas cools by exchange with the reaction mixture which is undergoing an endothermic catalytic reforming reaction.
At the reactor outlet, the cooled gas is sent via line 7 to a second combustion chamber 8 where it is reheated by combustion of fuel gas supplied via line 9. At the outlet from the combustion chamber, the hot gas is sent at a temperature of close to 750° C. to a turbo-expander 10 which drives an alternator 11 to produce electricity.
The effluent gasoline from the exchanger 41 moves via a line 42.
Clearly, this variation is also possible in the same manner in the case of
The combustion gas enters the reactor 60 via line 6 and leaves via line 7.
The feed arrives at a feed pump 15 via a line 14. The feed is sent from the pump outlet via a line 16 to the heat exchanger 19 which is preferably of the Packinox type.
The recycle gas which moves via a line 26 is also sent to said exchanger 19 for mixing with the feed moving via the line 16 in the exchanger and heated to a temperature close to 440° C. by exchange with the reaction mixture leaving the reactor 60 via line 18. At the outlet from the heat exchanger 19, the reaction mixture is sent to the reactor 60 via line 17. The reaction mixture leaving the reactor via line 18 is at about 490° C. and is sent to the top of the heat exchanger 19 where it is cooled to about 100° C. At the outlet from the heat exchanger 19, the effluent is sent via the line 20 to a heat exchanger 21, where it is cooled by heat exchange with air or cooling water. At the outlet from the exchanger 21, the cooled and partially condensed effluent is sent via a line 22 to a separator tank 23. The liquid from the tank is withdrawn via a line 28 to a stabilization section. Part of the gas phase from the separator tank 24, principally constituted by hydrogen, is used to constitute a gas recycle, compressed by compressor 25 then moving via line 26, the remainder being sent to a purification section via a line 27.
Four annular zones centred about the vertical axis are in succession from the edge towards the centre of the reactor, namely a first zone (visible in
Vertical hermetic panels (visible in
Each sector comprises an exchange section 61 and a catalytic section 62. The ensemble of the exchange sections forms the exchange zone 204 and the ensemble of the catalytic sections forms the catalytic zone 202. Each sector comprises a supply section 161 and a collection section 162. The ensemble of supply sections forms the supply zone 201 and the ensemble of collection sections forms the collection zone 203.
The combustion gas moves from bottom to top in the reactor. Combustion gas is supplied via the bottom of the reactor via the inlet conduit 6 then is distributed into each exchange section via conduits 70 then via tubular chambers 71 before being distributed via tubular plates 69 into tubes 99. At the outlet from the tubes, the combustion gas is collected from the top of the reactor in tubular chambers 72 then sent via conduits 73 provided with expansion bellows 74 to the outlet conduit 7.
The reaction mixture passes through all the sectors in succession. The reaction mixture enters via the conduit 17 and at the collection section of the last sector, it is collected via the conduit (visible in
The movement of the reaction mixture, comprising hydrogen and hydrocarbons, is represented by the arrows.
The pressure at the reactor inlet is approximately 4 bars. The reaction mixture enters the exchange zone of the first sector via the inlet 66 (see arrow 101). In this first sector, the reaction mixture heats up while dropping (arrow 102) as a counter current to the combustion gas and leaves the first exchange section via the outlet 75. The gas passes below the catalytic section 62 (arrow 103) between the catalyst down pipes 263, rises along the shell and passes through the catalytic section 62 (arrows 104). The reaction mixture reacts and cools very rapidly on the catalyst as the naphthenes present in the feed react very rapidly and in a highly endothermic manner.
The temperature is generally less than 400° C. at the outlet from the first catalyst section. The reaction mixture is then evacuated from the first section at the top of the reactor and sent to the second section via a conduit (visible in
As the reactions progress, fewer and fewer naphthenes remain, the paraffins are slower to react and exothermic cracking partially compensates for the endothermic nature of the other reactions. The outlet and thus inlet temperature profile of the reaction mixture in the successive sectors is thus ascending, which is considered to be favourable to yields.
At the outlet from the last sector, the reaction mixture is collected by the conduit (visible in
Four annular zones centred on the vertical axis are in succession from the edge to the centre of the reactor: the supply zone 201, the catalytic zone 202, the collection zone 203 and the exchange zone 204.
Vertical hermetic panels 65 are fixed on the central cylindrical zone 205 and divide the reactor into 8 sectors.
The conduits 64 allow passage from one sector to another. The reaction mixture enters the first exchange section via the inlet 66. At the outlet from the last sector, the reaction mixture is collected via the conduit 67.
The configuration of the reactor shown in
Consider a catalytic reforming unit processing 60 tonnes per hour of feed with 35 tonnes of catalyst.
The feed was a 90-170° C. cut with a paraffins content of 60% by volume, a naphthenes content of 25% by volume and an aromatics content of 15% by volume.
The pure hydrogen/feed molar ratio was 2.5.
The target octane number was 102.
The whole catalyst was regenerated continuously in 2.5 days.
To provide the heat for the reaction, approximately 75.24 million kJ/h (18 million kcal/h), 330 tonnes of air was compressed to 4 bars absolute. The centrifugal air compressor had a polytropic efficiency of 80% and consumed 16.7 MW. The temperature at the compressor outlet was 192° C. In the first combustion chamber, 4160 kg/h of natural gas at 15° C. was burned with a lower calorific power of 46439.8 kJ/kg (11110 kcal/kg). The temperature at the combustion chamber outlet was 700° C. The combustion gas arrived via the conduit 6 at approximately 700° C.
The inlet and catalytic reforming side outlet temperatures in the various sectors were as follows:
The reaction mixture arrived at the reactor at 450° C. from the Packinox feed-effluent exchanger. It was heated up by exchange with the hot fumes from the first sector and arrived in the catalyst of the first sector at 486° C. and was then sent to the second sector where it was heated up before being supplied to the second sector. There were 8 sectors in this example:
The combustion gas left the reactor at 469° C. after having given up 88.198 million KJ/h (21.1 MM Kcal/h) to the reaction mixture.
The effluent combustion gas was sent to a second combustion chamber where 2560 kg/h of fuel gas was burned in order to reach 760° C. at a pressure of 3.4 bars absolute at the inlet to an expansion turbine. This turbine had a polytropic efficiency of 85% and provided approximately 26 MW of electrical power which could drive the air compressor and supply sufficient electricity for the catalytic reforming and pre-treatment units.
At the turbine outlet, the gaseous effluent was at a temperature of 526° C. which meant that either more electricity could be produced by generating steam, or a heat transfer fluid could be re-heated, which could reboil the columns of the process (the stripping column for pre-treatment and stabilization of reforming).
In this example, 48.07 million kJ/h (11.5 MM kcal/h) was available between 526° C. and 400° C., which was more than sufficient for the two columns.
An exchange surface of approximately 4000 m2 was necessary, i.e. 8 times 500 m2. This corresponded to 8 times 350 tubes 30 mm in diameter and 15 m long.
The example is given for tubular exchangers to simplify the calculations, but the scope of the invention also encompasses using other types of exchanger, for example Packinox type welded plate exchangers, which could result in a much more compact configuration.
The tubes were installed in a triangular pattern with a pitch P=38 mm. At this pitch, a cross section of 0.00125 m2 (0.866×P2 ) was required to house one tube, and thus approximately 3.5 m2 to house the 2800 tubes.
By leaving an access 0.8 m in diameter at the centre and increasing the surface area by 15% to take the sectioning into account, then a surface area of 0.5+3.5×1.15 =4.5 m2 was required for the whole exchange zone, i.e. a diameter of 2.4 in.
The catalyst was installed in an annular zone with an internal diameter of 3.2 m and over a height of close to 14 m. There were 35 tonnes of catalyst, i.e. about 50 m3, and thus 3.6 m2 of catalytic zone (50/14). The external diameter of the annular catalytic zone was thus 3.85 m.
Thus, each sector comprised, starting from the outer shell:
In order to install the exchange tubes and the catalyst as explained above, then, a shell 5.7 m in internal diameter and approximately 16.5 m high was required.
The amount of coke produced was very small in the first sector and increased from sector to sector, being highest in the last sector (8% of coke if the catalyst moved in that sector for 2.5 days). One solution is to circulate the catalyst at the same rate throughout, to mix the catalyst at the reactor outlet in order to send it to the regenerator and to regenerate it as a mixture, the mean coke content then being only approximately 4%, thus allowing safe regeneration.
However, this means that the catalyst in the first sectors is regenerated before it is necessary, so it is clearly preferable to make the dimensions of the catalyst downflow devices such that the catalyst from the first sectors drops more slowly and the catalyst from the last sectors drops more quickly.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0708560 | Dec 2007 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR08/01675 | 12/1/2008 | WO | 00 | 6/4/2010 |