This application and claims priority to Brazilian Patent Application No. PI 0704443-7 filed Nov. 30, 2007, the entire contents are hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to a system and process for the separation of suspensions of spent catalysts and hydrocarbons formed in fluid catalytic cracking units (FCCUs) with multiple ascending flow reaction tubes, hereinafter “risers”.
More specifically, the present invention relates to a known system of termination of risers to be used in the separation of suspensions containing spent catalysts and mixture of cracked hydrocarbons, these suspensions forming at the outlet of the risers of FCCUs equipped with more than one riser in parallel.
The invention also relates to a process for the separation of these suspensions of spent catalysts and hydrocarbons which are formed in these types of units.
The object of the fluid catalytic cracking process (FCC) is to convert liquid hydrocarbons of high molecular weight, generally exhibiting an initial boiling point (IBP) in the range from 320° C. to 390° C., in light hydrocarbon fractions such as gasoline (IBP about 30° C.) and liquid petroleum gas (maximum vapour pressure of 15 kgf/cm2 at 37.8° C.).
The stages of the FCC process are fully known to persons skilled in the art and are described in various patents. Considered of particular importance is the process described in Brazilian Patent PI 9303773-2, incorporated in full herein as reference.
One of the stages of the fluid catalytic cracking process is the separation of the spent particles from the reactive mixture of cracked hydrocarbons, which make up the suspension which emerges from the risers when hydrocarbons are brought into reaction in the presence of specific catalysts. Such separation, carried out in a separator vessel, is done by means of systems which make use of deflection mechanisms (inertial systems), which use the inertial force of the particles to separate them, or systems which use devices referred to as cyclones which make use of centrifugal force to carry out such separation.
Cyclones may be classified in two categories. Cyclones referred to as “confiners”, which are characterised by temporarily confining, by means of special “flapper” type valves, for example, particles separated from the spent catalyst in its funnel-shaped parts, referred to hereinafter as “sealing legs”, while the hydrocarbon vapours are released via overhead ducts.
Cyclones without sealing legs, also referred to as “pseudo-cyclones”, do not retain the separated particles and consequently release them as soon as they are separated, by way of their lower open parts, directly to the separator vessel, whereby they simultaneously release the cracked hydrocarbon vapours via the overhead ducts.
In general, separation devices in their various different types function adequately. Nevertheless, new types of petroleum, increasing demands on productivity, and the protection of the environment require improvement of the traditional FCC processes, incurring additional difficulties for these types of separation.
For example, an increase in the conversion rates of gasoline hydrocarbons in FCC processes has only been possible since the development of more thermally stable catalysts, with high selectivity and activity. Such characteristics at the same time allow for operational temperatures to be increased and dwell time in the risers to be decreased, creating an additional problem for the termination systems of these risers. Such a problem highlights the necessities for dwell time in the cyclones and the separator vessel, the operation of which is beginning to represent a restriction on the discharge rate which is disproportional to the permissible dwell time of reagents in the riser.
The reaction conditions normally used to maximise the production of gasoline, making use of catalysts of the latest generation, can achieve dwell times capable of attaining the range from 0.2 to 0.1 second. Under these conditions, the separation equipment can take more time for separation than is available for contact between the two phases in the risers, resulting in degradation of the products, excessive formation of coke, and low production.
Another problem which arises for separation equipment involves FCC units with multiple risers. Arising from the need for greater flexibility of operation in integrated refineries, these units allow for each riser to operate under different conditions, such that all of them empty their reactive mixtures into separation equipment units mounted in the interior of one single separator vessel, where the separated catalysts are submitted to correction operations (“stripping”), to be regenerated subsequently.
In consequence, this means that in the most modern FCC processes there is a simultaneous increase in volume, in the catalyst/hydrocarbons ratio, in the flow rate of the suspension to be separated, and in the quality of the products created. Taking account of the fact that operations in the risers tend to be unstable, since sudden increases in pressure are common, of the order of 2 to 20 times in the original design format, the result is that there is a considerable increase in the complexity not only of the operation but also of the process of separation of the suspensions containing spent FCC catalysts and the hydrocarbons produced in such units. The structural and mechanical assembly of the unit, moreover, is already not so simple, given the large volume and weight which the unit in question acquires when using a separation system for each riser.
Examples of operations with FCC units provided with multiple risers are described in Brazilian Patents PI0302325-7 and PI 0205585-6, also incorporated in full as references, in which a number of different operational conditions are presented which can be used in each of the multiple risers of these types of units.
Brazilian Patent PI 9303773-2 describes a separation system which uses isolated riser termination systems particularly specified to be used in FCC processes, which essentially comprises a cyclonic separation device which is directly connected to the riser and which is designed in such a way as to avoid the restricting of the catalysts collected across one leg. Specifically, this involves a cyclone without a leg (pseudo-cyclone), open in its lower section directly into the separator vessel, which takes advantage of the large volume of the separator vessel to absorb the possible operational discontinuity of the riser while maintaining a sufficiently efficient separation. In consequence, all the advantages are maintained due to the rapid separation between the reactive gaseous phase and the suspension of catalyst particles with its reduced activity and selectivity. The gaseous phase of cracked hydrocarbons undergoes other separation processes before being released for subsequent refinery treatments.
Also described is a new process of fluid catalytic cracking using the said pseudo-cyclone, which offers improvements in relation to the prior art, in particular with regard to overcoming the problem of the operational discontinuity of the riser.
More recent research indicates that co-existence can be maintained of the use of inertial separation systems and systems comprising cyclones, both confiners as well as non-confiners. American Patents U.S. Pat. No. 5,837,129 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,113,777, for example, exhibit inertial separator devices of the “ram's horn” type, directly connected to the terminations of the risers, located internally in the regenerator vessel, and provided with gas outlets arranged horizontally and connected to them, which move the said separator device from the centre towards their upper part. These patents teach that the use of these devices provides rapid and efficient separation of the hydrocarbon vapours from the catalyst particles, and, by reducing the contact time between the product vapours and the catalyst particles in the separation zone of the separator vessel, reduce the thermal cracking of these products.
The application for American Patent US 2006/0177357 exhibits a variation of the configuration of the separation devices described heretofore, in which the operational deficiencies of the sealing legs of the confiner cyclones are circumvented by the use of sealing devices of the “bathtub” type, which have holes in the base to fluidise the catalysts retained in them and apertures in the upper part to allow for the discharge by effusion of the fluidized catalysts. Such fluidization is obtained by means of a correction gas, such as water vapour or some other gas normally used in these correction operations.
Brazilian Patent PI 0405873-9 exhibits a mixed termination system, which uses both types of devices (inertial and centrifugal) for the separation of suspensions of spent catalysts and hydrocarbons in FCC units which have a descending flow reactor (“downer”).
Finally, an analysis of the present state of the art indicates a development in FCC processes aimed at meeting in an adequate manner the more severe operational conditions involved. In other words, separation systems must continue to function in the face of the need for minimal dwell times in the risers, subject to high catalyst/hydrocarbon ratios, and still being resistant to high erosion pressures of the material.
The state of the art, however, does not exhibit separation systems which are capable of dealing with operations directed at maximising the production of olefins, operations which require a high catalyst/hydrocarbon ratio in the risers, resulting in the use of multiple risers to crack the flows recycled from the main reactor, additional loads, and segregated loads with processing under different operational conditions.
The object of the present invention is to resolve this problem by proposing a new separation system, with much simpler and more compact assembly, which simultaneously integrates inertial and centrifugal separation devices, the latter being both confiners as well as non-confiners, in an innovative configuration which makes it possible to operate FCC units with multiple risers under extreme operating conditions.
The present invention significantly increases the efficiency of separation of the suspensions containing spent catalysts and a mixture of cracked hydrocarbons, then only 10%-15% of the spent catalyst would need to be separated in the cyclones.
The present invention involves a system for the separation of suspensions of spent catalysts and hydrocarbons formed in FCC units with multiple ascending flow reaction tubes (risers), consisting of:
The present invention also relates to a process for the separation of suspensions of spent catalysts and hydrocarbons formed in FCC units with multiple ascending flow reaction tubes, risers, using the system referred to above, this process consisting of the following stages:
The system and process of separation of suspensions of spent catalysts and hydrocarbons from the FCC multiple riser unit (FCCU), the objects of the present invention, will be described in detail hereinafter, based on the figures referred to below, which are an integral part of this Description.
In order to be better understood, the detailed description of the system and the process for the separation of suspensions of spent catalysts and hydrocarbons in FCCUs with multiple risers, the object of the present invention, will be provided on the basis of the figures, in accordance with the identification of the respective components
After being submitted to cracking in the risers (2 and 3), the loads A and B referred to are transformed into finely divided suspensions of particles of spent catalysts and a mixture of gaseous cracked hydrocarbons as a majority (between 90 and 95% of the volume of the mixture), and move to the upper end of the risers (2 and 3) in order to reach the first inclined sections (4 and 5) of the interconnections between the said risers (2 and 3) and the separator vessel (1). The said inclination varies in the range from 35° to 50°. At this point the particles of the spent catalysts from the suspensions undergo a first deflection in order to reach the walls of the inclined sections (4 and 5) and, by virtue of having their direction drastically changed, they have reduced velocities; due to inertia, they begin to to separate from the mixture of cracked hydrocarbons.
The particles of the spent catalysts from the suspensions deriving from the inclined sections (4 and 5) arrive at a second vertical section (6) which connects the interconnections between the risers (2 and 3) and the separator vessel (1), in which the separation takes place of a good part of the spent catalyst from the mixture of cracked hydrocarbons. A portion from 80% to 85% of the mass of particles of spent catalyst drains through an orifice present at the vertex of the inverted cone (7). This inverted cone (7) forms an angle of between 50° and 70° with its generatrix, and is provided with a mechanism which regulates the diameter of the said orifice in its vertex, capable of varying the diameter of the orifice from 30% to 50% of the basic diameter. The inverted cone (7) is located at the lower end of the said second vertical section (6) which connects the interconnections between the risers and the separator vessel (1). The diameter of the orifice is designed in accordance with the anticipated flow of spent catalyst, but can be regulated in such a way that the spent catalyst draws the minimum of gas to pass through the orifice.
The particles of spent catalyst which still remain in the suspension, due to their incomplete separation in the vertical section (6) of the interconnections between the risers and the separator vessel (1), of the order of 10% to 15% of the total quantity of active catalyst initially present in the risers, are subjected to the next stage of the separation process. The suspension retained in the vertical section (6) is forced to enter the cyclones without sealing legs (8), where the particle phase undergoes rapid separation while at the same outlet in the open lower parts (13) of the cyclones without sealing legs (8), in the direction of the fluidized bed (12) present in the separator vessel (1), and the gaseous phase passes via overhead ducts (10) of the cyclones without sealing legs (8) until it enters the first stage cyclones (9) where the final stages are carried out of separation of the gaseous hydrocarbons, which then pass for subsequent treatment via overhead ducts (14) of the cyclones of the first stage (9). The cyclones without sealing legs (8) are connected to the walls of the lower third of the second vertical section (6) of the interconnections of the risers at a distance of 2 to 3 times the diameter of the said vertical section (6) of the interconnections, around the lower end of the vertical section, at least 3 in number and equidistant from one another by 120°. Preferentially, the cyclones without sealing legs (8) are used in fours and are connected to the vertical section (6) of the interconnections of the risers in diametrically opposed positions. The conventional cyclones of the first stage (9) must be of the same number of the cyclones without sealing legs (8).
The catalyst particles drawn to this point by the flow of ascending gases are once again separated and descend to the fluidized bed of the catalyzer (12) of the separator vessel (1) via the sealing legs (11) of the primary cyclones, the lower ends of which are immersed or not in the said fluidized bed (12). The configuration of the cyclones of the first stage (9), as well as the sealing shape of the legs, may be any one of those encountered in the state of the art.
It should be noted that, in order to render the description of the system as simple as possible,
The present invention will now be illustrated by an example, which, however, must not be considered as limitative but viewed simply as a means of demonstrating that the objectives of the invention are fully attainable.
Tests were carried out in a pilot plant, in which the efficiency of the separation system of the present invention was tested against a separation system of the prior state of the art, under similar operating conditions.
To assess the results obtained from the tests, the following principal aspects were considered:
The flow conditions for the tests were:
The catalyzers used in the tests were of the balance catalyzer type. One of them had a particle distribution size with a fraction of between 0 and 40 μm, in the range from 13% to 17%, and the other, also with a particle distribution size with a fraction of between 0 and 40 μm, in the range of 3%.
The efficiency of the yield was measured by quantifying the quantity of catalyst lost in the balance separation system, from the movement of the “flapper” valve of an assessment cyclone in the pilot plant, and in consideration of the time between the opening and closing of this valve, as well as the level of catalyst formed in the sealing leg of the cyclone.
As is shown by the graph of the operation of the pilot plant shown in
The results obtained for gas-solid separation according to the prior state of the art, without the use of pre-preparation or with the orifice of the inverted cone (7) of the second vertical section (6) of the interconnection of the risers with the separator vessel, indicated in
The separation system of the present invention also presents better results with regard to corrosion, given that, with the reduction of the catalyst flow to the cyclones, the occurrence of instability in the catalyst flow at the cyclone intakes is reduced, as is the erosion at their intakes.
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Number | Date | Country |
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PI 0405873-9 | Dec 2004 | BR |
PI 0302325-7 | Mar 2005 | BR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090142241 A1 | Jun 2009 | US |