1. Field of the Invention
The present disclosure generally relates to emission control systems. The present disclosure more specifically relates to separating gasses in exhaust emissions from combustion of a fuel.
2. Description of Related Art
Generally ambient air is used for combustion of fuel. Ambient air includes about 80% nitrogen gas and about 20% oxygen. Consequently, exhaust gas emitted from the combustion of fuel primarily includes a mixture of carbon dioxide gas and water vapor produced resulting from the combustion process and nitrogen gas from the ambient air. Water vapor can be condensed from exhaust gas according to standard techniques and safely returned to the environment. Separation of the carbon dioxide from nitrogen is an important step in recovering the carbon dioxide from the emitted exhaust gas. Unfortunately, separation of carbon dioxide from nitrogen requires complex chemistry involving potentially hazardous chemicals and/or substantial amounts of energy.
In an embodiment of the presently claimed invention, exhaust gas emitted from combustion of fuel may be compressed using a compressor and then cooled to liquid carbon dioxide temperature. Liquid carbon dioxide in the compressed exhaust gas may be separated from cold nitrogen gas. The separated cold nitrogen gas maybe used to drive a turbine, which in turn drives the compressor. The system includes heat exchangers for cooling the exhaust gas while heating nitrogen gas, thus, transferring heat energy from the exhaust gas to the nitrogen gas for use in driving the turbines.
In an embodiment of the presently claimed invention, a system is provided for separating carbon dioxide from nitrogen in exhaust gas from combustion of fuel. The system comprises a compressor configured to compress the exhaust gas and a heat exchanger configured to cool the compressed exhaust gas to liquid carbon dioxide temperature. A fluid trap is configured to separate liquid carbon dioxide from compressed nitrogen gas in the compressed exhaust gas and store the separated liquid carbon dioxide in a tank. A turbine coupled to the compressor is in communication with the fluid trap. The turbine is configured to use the separated compressed nitrogen gas from the fluid trap for driving the compressor. The turbine may include a first stage and a second stage. The heat exchanger is configured to warm the nitrogen gas between the first stage and the second stage using heat received from cooling the compressed exhaust gas to liquid carbon dioxide temperature. A regenerative heat exchanger is configured to cool the exhaust gas from a combustion temperature to ambient temperature before introduction into the compressor and to warm the nitrogen gas between the first stage and the second stage using heat transferred from cooling the exhaust gas.
In an embodiment of the presently claimed invention, a method is provided for separating carbon dioxide from nitrogen in exhaust gas emitted from a combustion of fuel. In this method, the emitted exhaust gas is compressed in a compressor from ambient pressure to high pressure and then cooled from ambient temperature to liquid carbon dioxide temperature. Liquid carbon dioxide is separated from high-pressure nitrogen gas at liquid carbon dioxide temperature and the separated high-pressure nitrogen gas is used for driving a turbine, which in turn drives the compressor. The method includes exchanging heat between the compressed exhaust gas and nitrogen gas released from the turbine. The exchange of heat may be used to cool the compressed exhaust gas to liquid carbon dioxide temperature and to warm the released nitrogen gas. The turbine may include two or more stages configured to drive the compressor. The method further includes releasing medium pressure nitrogen gas from the first stage of the turbine at cryo-temperature and exchanging heat between the emitted exhaust gas and the medium pressure nitrogen gas to cool the emitted exhaust gas and to heat the medium pressure nitrogen gas. The method also includes driving a second stage of the turbine using the heated medium pressure nitrogen gas and releasing ambient pressure nitrogen gas from the second stage.
In an embodiment of the presently claimed invention, a system is described for separating carbon dioxide from nitrogen in exhaust gas emitted during combustion of fuel. The system includes a regenerative heat exchanger configured to cool hot exhaust gas from combustion temperature to ambient temperature and a compressor configured to compress the ambient-temperature exhaust gas from ambient pressure to high pressure. The system further includes a cryo heat exchanger configured to cool the high-pressure exhaust gas from ambient temperature to cryo-temperature and a fluid trap configured to separate liquid carbon dioxide from nitrogen gas in the cryo-temperature exhaust. A two stage turbine may be in fluid communication with the fluid trap, the cryo heat exchanger, and regenerative heat exchanger. The first stage of the turbine may be configured to use the high-pressure nitrogen gas from the fluid trap for driving the compressor and to release the nitrogen gas at a medium pressure. The cryo heat exchanger may be configured to warm the medium pressure nitrogen gas released from the first stage using the cooling of the high-pressure exhaust gas. The regenerative heat exchanger may be configured to warm the medium pressure nitrogen gas from the cryo heat exchanger using the cooling of the hot exhaust gas. The second stage turbine may be configured to use the warmed nitrogen gas from the regenerative heat exchanger to drive the compressor.
A system is described for compressing and cooling hot exhaust gas to liquid carbon dioxide temperature for separation into liquid carbon dioxide and nitrogen gas, and then heating the nitrogen gas to drive a turbine. The turbine may be coupled to a compressor for compressing the exhaust gas. The turbine may have multiple stages. The system includes one or more heat exchangers between stages of the turbine. The heat exchangers may be used for cooling the exhaust gas while heating nitrogen gas, thus, transferring heat energy from the exhaust gas to the nitrogen gas for use in driving one or more stages of the turbine.
A combustion source 110 emits exhaust gas 140 from combustion of fuel, e.g., methane with ambient air containing oxygen, nitrogen, and other trace gases. The exhaust gas 140 may be emitted at a combustion temperature and an ambient pressure of about 1 atmosphere (ATM). A range of combustion temperatures includes about +250° to 800° Celsius (C). For simplicity, a combustion temperature of +300° C. is used for describing the exhaust gas 140. The exhaust gas 140 includes a mixture of mostly carbon dioxide, nitrogen gases, and water vapor along with trace gases such as argon, oxides of nitrogen (NOx), oxides of sulfur (SOx), and oxides of carbon (COx) comprising less than 1-2 percent. For simplicity, the trace gases are ignored in describing operation of the system 100 of
The regenerative heat exchanger 112 may be used to cool the exhaust gas 140 from combustion temperature to ambient temperature. Ambient temperature may be in a range of about −20° to +100° C. The regenerative heat exchanger 112 of
The first stage compressor 116 receives the exhaust gas 142 via the intercooler 114. The first stage compressor 116 and the second stage compressor 118 may form a two stage compressor for compressing the exhaust gas 142 to about high pressure. High pressure includes pressures greater than about 8 ATM. The intercooler 114 may be used to remove heat from the exhaust gas 142 as described elsewhere herein. For example, the intercooler 114 may transfer the heat to ambient surroundings. The second stage compressor 118 may output compressed exhaust gas 144 at high pressure of about 12 ATM and an ambient temperature of about 20° C. While a two stage compressor is illustrated in
The cryo heat exchanger 120 may receive compressed exhaust gas 144 from the second stage compressor 118 via the intercooler 114. The cryo heat exchanger 120 is configured to cool the compressed exhaust gas 144 from ambient temperature to a cryo-temperature. Generally, cryo-temperatures may be considered to range from a little above −273° C. to about −30° C. The cryo-temperature of the cooled exhaust may be about a temperature of compressed liquid carbon dioxide at a pressure of greater than about 7-8 ATM. For example, the cryo heat exchanger of
The fluid trap 122 is configured to separate liquid carbon dioxide 148 from nitrogen gas 150 and provide the liquid carbon dioxide 148 to the tank 124. The fluid trap 122 of
The cryo-turbine 126 is configured to cool the separated nitrogen gas 150 and drive the compressors 116 and 118. The fluid trap 122 of
The bypass valve 128 may be used to selectively direct the medium pressure nitrogen gas 152 to the tank 124 or to bypass the tank 124. The bypass valve 128 may direct all or a portion of the flow of the medium pressure nitrogen gas 152 through the tank 124 as cold nitrogen gas 154. Since the cold nitrogen gas 154 may be at a temperature of about −130° C. and a target temperature for the tank 124 may vary from ambient at startup to about −40° C. during operation, the cold nitrogen gas 154 may be used for cooling the tank 124 or maintaining a desired temperature for the tank 124. The bypass valve 128 may direct all or a portion of the flow of the medium pressure nitrogen gas 152 to bypass the tank 124 as bypass nitrogen gas 156.
The cryo heat exchanger 120 is configured to capture and conserve heat energy from cooling compressed exhaust gas 144 and warming nitrogen gas 158. The cryo heat exchanger 120 receives nitrogen gas 158 which is a combination of the cold nitrogen gas 154 and the bypass nitrogen gas 156. The cryo heat exchanger 120 may warm the nitrogen gas 158 to ambient temperature nitrogen gas 160, using heat energy from the compressed exhaust gas 144. The cryo heat exchanger 120 may use the nitrogen gas 158 to cool the compressed exhaust gas 144 from ambient temperature to about −40° C. Thus, heat energy from the compressed exhaust gas 144 may be captured and conserved.
The regenerative heat exchanger 112 is configured to capture and conserve heat energy from cooling the hot exhaust gas 140 and warming ambient temperature nitrogen gas. The regenerative heat exchanger 112 may receive the ambient temperature nitrogen gas 160 from the cryo heat exchanger 120. The regenerative heat exchanger 112 may warm the ambient temperature nitrogen gas 160 to hot nitrogen gas 162 using heat energy from the hot exhaust gas 140. Thus, heat energy from the hot exhaust gas 140 may be captured and conserved.
The power turbine 130 is configured convert energy in the hot nitrogen gas 162 to mechanical energy to drive the compressors 116 and/or 118. The power turbine 130 may receive hot nitrogen gas 162 from the regenerative heat exchanger 112 at medium pressure and release nitrogen gas at ambient temperature and pressure. For example, the power turbine 130 may receive hot nitrogen gas at about +300° C. and 5-6 ATM and release nitrogen gas 164 at about +95° C. and 1 ATM. The power turbine 130 may drive the compressor 116 and/or 118 via the coupling 132.
A motor 134 may be used for driving the compressor. The motor 134 may be coupled to the compressor 116 via the coupling 132. The coupling 132 may include a drive shaft, clutch, gears, pneumatics, and/or hydraulics. The motor 134 may provide additional energy to the system 100 to make up for losses due to inefficiencies. The motor 134 may also be used during start-up of the system 100 for driving the system 100 while temperatures and pressures settle to an operating state. The motor 134 may include a generator configured to convert excess power from the system 100 into electrical power. In various embodiments, the motor 134 includes an electrical motor, a steam engine, a turbine, an engine configured to burn fuel such as diesel, gasoline, natural gas, coal, methane, and/or the like.
A controller 136 may be coupled to the system 100 via a control coupling (not illustrated). The controller 136 may include one or more computer systems, processors, computer interfaces, memory, removable storage media or a combination thereof. The computer interfaces may include various combinations of wiring harnesses, relays, circuit boards, processors, optical transmitters, optical cable, optical receivers, wireless transmitters, wireless receivers, electrical actuators, a hydraulic lines, hydraulic actuators, pneumatic lines, and pneumatic actuators. The controller 136 may further communicate control commands to components of the system 100, including engines, motors, generators, valves, the compressors, turbines, heat exchangers, traps, and/or tanks.
The temperatures and pressures illustrated in
The controller 136 may use measured temperatures and/or pressures for controlling valves such as the bypass valve 128 and the check valve 320 during start-up. For example, at the beginning of a start-up process, the various components of the system 100 (including the fluid trap 122 and the tank 124) are at an ambient temperature and pressure. The motor 134 drives the compressor 116 and/or 118 to compress the exhaust gas 142 and output compressed exhaust gas 144. The intercooler 114 may maintain the compressed exhaust gas 144 at ambient temperature. Carbon dioxide in the compressed exhaust gas 146 is not liquid at ambient temp. Thus, the compressed nitrogen gas 150 initially includes carbon dioxide gas. The cryo turbine 126 releases the nitrogen gas 152 (including carbon dioxide gas) at a lower temperature than the nitrogen gas 150. The cryo heat exchanger 120 uses the lower temperature nitrogen gas (including carbon dioxide) to cool the compressed exhaust gas 146, thus, multiplying the cooling effect of the cryo turbine 126.
As the cryo heat exchanger 120 and cryo turbine 126 continue to cool the compressed exhaust gas 146 to liquid carbon dioxide temperature, the fluid trap 122 begins to separate liquid carbon dioxide 148 from nitrogen gas 150. The nitrogen gas 154 may be used to pre-cool the tank 124 from ambient temperature. The bypass valve 128 may direct nitrogen gas 154 to the tank 124 for pre-cooling the tank 124. Pre-cooling the tank 124 may decrease the pressure in the tank 124 below the pressure in the fluid trap 122. The check valve 320 may release liquid carbon dioxide 148 into the tank 124 when the pressure in the tank 124 is less than or equal to the pressure in the fluid trap 122.
When the fluid trap 122 and the tank 124 are stable at liquid carbon dioxide temperatures, the bypass valve 128 may direct the bypass nitrogen gas 156 to the cryo heat exchanger 120. The bypass valve 128 may direct a portion of the nitrogen gas 154 to the tank 124 to maintain the temperature of the tank 124 at or below liquid carbon dioxide temperature. Liquid carbon dioxide 148 may be removed from the tank 124 as a liquid. For example, liquid carbon dioxide 148 may be drained from the tank 124 at about a rate that maintains a constant pressure within the tank 124.
The controller 136 uses the temperatures returned from the temperature sensor 310, 312, and/or 314 to determine how much of the nitrogen gas 152 to direct to the tank 124 as nitrogen gas 154 or to the cryo heat exchanger 120 as bypass nitrogen gas 156. For example, during stable operation, the amount of nitrogen gas 154 may be increased as the temperature at 312 increases, and decreased as the temperature at sensor 312 decreases. During startup, the controller 136 may direct all of the nitrogen gas 152 to the tank 124 as nitrogen gas 154 until reaching stable operation at liquid carbon dioxide temperature. Then, the controller 136 may bypass the tank 124 using the bypass valve 128. The controller 136 may compare the temperature at sensor 312 to the temperature at sensor 310 and/or 314. The controller 136 may use techniques such as a proportional, integral, differential (PID) loop to control the bypass valve 128 based on the temperatures at sensors 310-314. The controller 136 may use pressures that are measured and returned from pressure sensors (not shown) to control the bypass valve 128.
The intercooler 114 is configured for cooling the exhaust gas between two or more stages of compression. This may be accomplished by transferring heat from the exhaust gas to the environment. The intercooler 114 of
The heat energy may be transferred from the compressed exhaust gas in the intercooler 114 to the environment using a heat exchanger 410. For example, the heat exchanger 410 may use a supply of cold water at ambient temperature for cooling the compressed exhaust gas in the intercooler 114 and discharge the heated water to the environment. For simplicity, two stages are illustrated in
A second stage comprising a cryo heat exchanger 120B, fluid trap 122B, and tank 124B may be used for cooling the compressed exhaust gas 144 to a liquid temperature for a second gas that is present in the compressed exhaust gas 144. As the second gas transitions to a liquid, the liquid may be separated in the fluid trap 122B and stored in the tank 124B. An example of the second gas is sulfur dioxide which is liquid below a temperature of about −10° C. at 12 ATM. N stages may include a Nth stage comprising a cryo heat exchanger 120N, fluid trap 122N, and tank 124N and may be used for cooling a Nth gas in the compressed exhaust gas 144 to a Nth liquid temperature. For example, carbon dioxide may be the Nth gas. Thus, multiple components may be individually separated from the exhaust gas 140. The controller 136 may be used for controlling valves to maintain the temperatures and pressures for the heat exchangers 120A-N, traps 122A-N, and tanks 124A-N.
Several embodiments are specifically illustrated and/or described herein. However, it will be appreciated that modifications and variations are covered by the above teachings and within the scope of the appended claims without departing from the spirit and intended scope thereof. For example, specific temperatures and pressures are recited in examples and figures. The specific temperatures and pressures are intended as examples and other temperatures and pressures within the scope of the claims may be used without departing from the invention. For example, separation of carbon dioxide is described. However, other components may be separated from exhaust gas including SO3, NO2, SO2, NO, CO, hydrocarbons, and etc. Various embodiments of the invention include logic stored on computer readable media, the logic configured to perform methods of the invention.
In the foregoing specification, the present invention is described with reference to specific embodiments thereof, but those skilled in the art will recognize that the present invention is not limited thereto. Various features and aspects of the above-described present invention may be used individually or jointly. Features in each of the various illustrations may be combined with features in other illustrations or used individually for illustrating the present invention. Further, the present invention can be utilized in any number of environments and applications beyond those described herein without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the specification. The specification and drawings are, accordingly, to be regarded as illustrative rather than restrictive. It will be recognized that the terms “comprising,” “including,” and “having,” as used herein, are specifically intended to be read as open-ended terms of art.
The present application claims the priority and benefit of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/720,481 titled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR SEQUESTERING EMISSIONS FROM ENGINES,” filed Mar. 9, 2010, and of U.S. patent application No. 61/293,609 titled “Zero-Emissions Engines,” filed Jan. 8, 2010. The disclosures of all of the above U.S. patent applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61293609 | Jan 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12720481 | Mar 2010 | US |
Child | 12729766 | US |