This application is the US-national stage of PCT application PCT/EP2012/052132 filed 8 Feb. 2012 and claiming the priority of German patent application 102011000770.9 itself filed 16 Feb. 2011.
This application is the US-national stage of PCT application PCT/EP2012/052132 filed 8 Feb. 2012 and claiming the priority of German patent application 102011000770.9 itself filed 16 Feb. 2011.
The invention relates to a method of reducing byproduct-gas emissions when charging oven chambers of a battery of coking ovens with blocks of compressed coal.
One special issue when operating a battery of coking ovens having oven chambers that are charged with compressed-coal blocks lies in the fact that, for charging, the oven chamber must be open on the machine side of the battery of coking ovens. While charging compressed-coal blocks into the oven chamber that has a temperature of about 1000° C. so-called byproduct gases that contain unhealthy components form spontaneously. Unless suitable countermeasures are implemented, with each opening of the oven chamber, an intolerable environmental problem is created.
In practical applications, it has been tried to resolve the above-described problem by aspirating a part of the byproduct gases into a crude-gas manifold connected to the oven chambers. This concept provides that, first, a part of the byproduct gases is supplied to a gas-treatment system together with the crude gases generated during the coking process inside the closed oven chambers, the gas-treatment system comprising at least one gas scrubber. The action of drawing off byproduct gases from the opened oven chamber can be effected by bypass pipes used for routing the incident byproduct gases into one of the neighboring oven chambers, and from there they reach the crude-gas manifold. However, practical experience has shown that the described measures are not useful for ensuring compliance with tightened environmental requirements.
The pressure inside the oven chambers of batteries of coking ovens with so-called bulk operation, having oven chambers that are filled with coal from above and through filling openings in the ceiling of the oven, is at times controlled individually, the crude-gas manifold of the battery of coking ovens being operated at a slight partial vacuum. When filling the oven chambers, the partial vacuum of the crude-gas manifold is used to draw off any byproduct gases that form and supply them to the gas treatment means. Insofar as this method is transferred to batteries of coke ovens where the oven chambers are charged with compressed-coal blocks, though it is possible to reduce visible emissions when charging the oven chambers, this operation results, however, in impermissibly high oxygen concentrations in the crude gas. There is no shortage of attempts to shield the openings on the oven chambers during the charging operation with hoods in order to minimize entry of environmental air into the system. However, these efforts have been without success. The air that gets in during the suction operation through the opened oven chamber can cause the automatic deactivation of the fine tar separator operating electrostatically. Moreover, proof has been found to indicate that reactions of oxygen with other components of the crude gas result in the formation of chemical compounds deposit in the pipes of systems downstream, thereby considerably restricting the use of the coke-oven gases produced during the coking operation for heating typical industrial furnaces and/or rendering their use impossible altogether. A further disadvantage that results from any intensive aspiration of the byproduct gases in the crude gas system is the fact that, due to so-called “carry-over,” it is possible for fine particles to enter the crude gas during the filling operation and collect in containers and the piping systems of the gas-treatment system producing a negative influence on the quality of the tar that is obtained from the gas treatment.
DE 2 238 372 [GB 1,387,962] relates to batteries of coking ovens with oven chambers that are filled from above with coal through fill openings in the oven ceiling. The oven chambers can be optionally connected to two manifolds, one manifold serving for drawing off the production gas and the other for aspirating the byproduct gases. Dust is removed from the suctioned-off byproduct gases inside a gas scrubber, and the gas is cleaned of any tar components.
In view of this background, it is the object of the present invention to provide an effective method of reducing byproduct-gas emissions when charging the oven chambers of a battery of coking ovens with compressed-coal blocks. On the one hand, the method must completely aspirate, in as much as this is possible, the byproduct gases generated when introducing the compressed-coal blocks, so that they do not escape through the open door on the machine side into the atmosphere; on the other hand, the method must ensure, simultaneously, that no oxygen enters, in as much as this is possible, into the crude-gas manifold and mixes with the coke-oven gas.
The present invention and solution of the task at hand provides for a method that presupposes that the oven chamber, which is to be charged with coal, is opened on the machine side of the battery of coking ovens and that compressed-coal blocks are inserted into the opened oven chamber. Any byproduct gases that are released while the compressed-coal blocks are being inserted into the hot oven chambers, are discharged according to the invention through a byproduct-gas manifold that is connected to the oven chamber and, preferably, subsequently freed of dust and burnt. Crude gases that form during a coking process inside the closed oven chambers are discharged through a crude-gas manifold connected to the oven chambers and supplied to a gas-treatment system having at least one gas scrubber. The components of the crude gas that are separated during scrubbing can be processed further into other byproducts. According to the invention, conduits that link the crude gas and byproduct-gas manifolds to the oven chambers are alternately opened and closed so that the byproduct gases generated on charging the oven chambers only go to the byproduct-gas manifold, and the coking-induced crude gases formed inside the closed oven chambers go only to the crude-gas manifold.
The core of the method according to the invention is based on the combination of a conventional crude-gas manifold for discharging crude gases formed by the coking process and a separate byproduct-gas manifold, which serves exclusively for aspirating the byproduct gases, without transfer of them to the gas-treatment system for the crude gas. The pressure inside the byproduct-gas manifold is preferably controlled so the aspirating action can be adapted to the local conditions. Since the byproduct gases are not subjected to any gas treatment that generates byproducts, any oxygen drawn into the byproduct gases is harmless. Preferably, the byproduct gases are completely incinerated and then sent to a stationary dust removal apparatus. To this end, it is possible to employ a separate dust removal unit or, if necessary, an available stationary dust removal apparatus for detecting emissions that are generated during the pushing of coke. The combined use of a stationary dust removal apparatus for removing the dust from emissions that are generated by pushing out the coke, on the one hand, and for removing the dust from the byproduct gases, on the other hand, does not result in any operationally related technical complications because setting of the compressed-coal blocks and the pushing of the coke can be implemented by the same machine at different stages of the process.
Several options are available for the configuration and operation of the byproduct-gas manifold. The byproduct-gas manifold for aspirating the byproduct gases can be connected to a byproduct-gas aspirating car able to travel along the battery of coke ovens. The byproduct-gas aspirating car may have a combustion chamber, and is docked to the oven chamber that must be charged with compressed-coal blocks. Moreover, the byproduct-gas aspirating car can optionally have a device for removing the dust from the byproduct gases. Blocking dampers or slides with temperature-resistant closure elements or locking devices using water-immersion, actuated from the outside, can be used for closing the conduits linking the oven chambers with the byproduct-gas manifold.
The scope of the invention further provides that the byproduct-gas manifold extends as a collecting pipe along the battery of coke ovens, and is connected by conduits to a locking device on the oven chambers of the battery of coke ovens. The flow blockers are blocking dampers or slides with temperature-resistant closure elements or water-immersion that can be opened and closed from the outside.
It is effective for the pressure inside the closed coke oven chambers to be controlled individually during the coking process. The crude-gas manifold can extend as a collecting pipe along the battery of coke ovens and is connected by conduits with respective flow blockers to the oven chambers of the battery of coke ovens. The flow blockers preferably have a dip cup filled with water, as well as a dip pipe that is connected to the gas-carrying conduit. The liquid level is controlled inside the dip cup to open or block the gas path. Using these devices, it is also possible to control the pressure inside each oven chamber. Control organs for maintaining certain pressure levels inside the oven chambers can also be made of temperature-resistant elements with and without water-immersion.
The crude-gas manifold and the byproduct-gas manifold can be installed and operated on the same side or on different sides of the battery of coke ovens. In many existing coke-oven batteries, the crude-gas manifold is on the machine side of the battery of coke ovens. It makes sense then to install and operate the byproduct-gas manifold on the other side, meaning the coke side, of the battery of coke ovens. It is understood that an arrangement that is a mirror image of the above is possible as well.
The subject-matter of the present invention also refers to an effective battery of coke ovens for implementing the described method according to the invention.
To illustrate, the invention will be described in further detail below on the basis of a single embodiment. Shown are as follows by way of schematic representations:
The oven chamber 1 shown in the drawing is part of a battery of coke ovens in a row in succession one next to the other. The oven chambers 1 are each provided with a door 2 on the machine side MS and also on the coke side KS. The machine side MS is the side of the battery of coke ovens where there is a pusher machine that not shown in
A crude-gas manifold 3 is provided for the discharge of crude gases formed during the coking process in the closed oven chambers. It extends as a collecting pipe longitudinally along the battery of coke ovens and is connected to the oven chambers of the battery of coke ovens by respective conduits 4. The conduits 4 each have a flow blocker 5 having in the embodiment of
The oven chambers 1 of the battery of coke ovens are charged with compressed-coal blocks 10 that are each introduced by the pusher machine into one of the opened oven chambers from the machine side MS. Byproduct gases having a temperature of about 1000° C. are released during introduction of the compressed-coal blocks into the oven chamber 10 and pass into a byproduct-gas manifold 11 connected to the oven chamber 1, then preferably freed of dust and incinerated in a stationary system shown schematically at 18. In the embodiment in
The flow blockers 14 or 5 that are connected to the byproduct-gas manifold 11 and to the crude-gas manifold 3 are alternately actuated, such that the byproduct gases that form during charging of an oven chamber are only conducted to the byproduct-gas manifold 11, and the crude gases that form during the coking process inside the closed oven chambers are only conducted to the crude-gas manifold 3. The crude gases are supplied to a gas treatment process via the crude-gas manifold 3 while byproducts are formed. The gas treatment comprises at least one gas scrubber shown schematically at 19. The byproduct gases that are separately discharged by the byproduct-gas manifold 11 are, preferably, freed of dust and incinerated, the use of the stationary dust removal device 18 being possible for the dust removal as well for detecting the emissions generated during the coke-pushing operation. It is understood that a separate dust removal apparatus can also be used for removing dust from the byproduct gases.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 000 770 | Feb 2011 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/052132 | 2/8/2012 | WO | 00 | 10/28/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/110380 | 8/23/2012 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3956073 | Carbone | May 1976 | A |
4100033 | Holter | Jul 1978 | A |
4244785 | Alderman | Jan 1981 | A |
4663134 | Laufhutte | May 1987 | A |
7094321 | Krebber | Aug 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2800011 | Jul 1979 | DE |
3329367 | Nov 1984 | DE |
3927758 | Aug 1991 | DE |
1387962 | Mar 1975 | GB |
Entry |
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Machine translation of DE 3927758 (Aug. 1991). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20140048403 A1 | Feb 2014 | US |