The invention is directed to a vessel for cooling syngas comprising a syngas collection chamber and a quench chamber. The syngas outlet of the syngas collection chamber is fluidly connected with the quench chamber via a tubular diptube.
Such a vessel is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,828,578. This publication describes a gasification reactor having a reaction chamber provided with a burner wherein a fuel and oxidant are partially oxidized to produce a hot gaseous product. The hot gases are passed via a constricted throat to be cooled in a liquid bath located below the reaction chamber. A diptube guides the hot gases into the bath. At the upper end of the diptube a quench ring is present. The quench ring has a toroidal body fluidly connected with a pressurized water source. A narrow channel formed in said body carries a flow of water to cool the inner wall of the diptube. The quench ring also has openings to spray water into the flow of hot gas as it passes the quench ring.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,271,243 describes a device for cooling hot gases deriving from incomplete oxidation in a reactor and loaded with solids. A pressurized vessel accommodates a refrigerator made of cooled pipe-slab walls at the top and a water bath for quench cooling at the bottom. The vessel also accommodates a gas-collecting section upstream of a first gas outlet and another gas-collecting section upstream of a second gas outlet. Accommodated in the first gas-collecting section is a shower ring, which is supplied with water from a circulation system. The ring sprays the gas leaving the refrigerator and lowers its temperature further before the gas exits through the gas outlets.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,808,197 discloses a combination diptube and quench ring, which is communicated with a pressurized source of a liquid coolant such as water and which directs a flow thereof against the diptube guide surfaces to maintain such surfaces in a wetted condition.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,976,203 describes a synthesis gas generator with combustion and quench chambers for generating, cooling and cleaning gases that are generated by partial oxidation, such generator including quench nozzles for spraying a quenching medium in a finely distributed form into the useful gas stream. The described generator further includes a cone arranged at the outlet of the quench chamber extending into the water bath chamber gas space.
WO 2008/065184 describes a vessel for cooling syngas wherein the wall of the reaction chamber is made of an arrangement of interconnected parallel arranged tubes resulting in a substantially gas-tight wall. The described vessel further contains a diptube that is partially submerged in a water bath. Preferably at the upper end of the diptube, injecting means are present to add a quenching medium to the, in use, downwardly flowing hot product gas.
None of U.S. Pat. No. 5,271,243, U.S. Pat. No. 4,808,197, U.S. Pat. No. 5,976,203 or WO 2008/065184 discloses the improved vessel design disclosed and claimed herein, wherein the diameter of the diptube at the end nearest to the syngas collection chamber is greater than the diameter of the diptube at the end terminating at the quench chamber and which comprises both a quench ring supplying a film of water to the surface of the diptube and water spray nozzles located in the diptube to spray droplets of water into the syngas as it flows downwardly through the diptube.
The present invention aims to provide an improved design for a vessel for cooling syngas comprising a syngas collection chamber and a quench chamber.
This is achieved by a vessel for cooling syngas comprising
a syngas collection chamber and a quench chamber, wherein the syngas collection chamber has a syngas outlet which is fluidly connected with the quench chamber via a tubular diptube,
wherein the diameter of the diptube at the end nearest to the syngas collection chamber is greater than the diameter of the diptube at the end terminating at the quench chamber,
wherein a discharge conduit is preferably present having an outflow opening for liquid water directed such that, in use, a film of water is achieved along the inner wall of the diptube, and
wherein water spray nozzles are located in the diptube to spray droplets of water into the syngas as it flows downwardly through the diptube.
Applicants found that by a diptube as claimed a more efficient vessel for cooling is provided. Preferably the diptube comprises a tubular part with the larger diameter and a tubular part with the smaller diameter which parts are fixed together by a frusto conical part. The diptube may also comprise a tubular part with the larger diameter connected with only a frusto conical part at the end terminating at the quench chamber. Preferably the ratio between the larger diameter and the smaller diameter is between 1.25:1 and 2:1.
The invention and its preferred embodiments will be further described by means of the following figures.
a shows an alternative design for a section of the reactor of
Syngas has the meaning of a mixture comprising carbon monoxide and hydrogen. The syngas is preferably prepared by gasification of an ash comprising carbonaceous feedstock, such as for example coal, petroleum coke, biomass and deasphalted tar sands residues. The coal may be lignite, bituminous coal, sub-bituminous coal, anthracite coal and brown coal. The syngas as present in the syngas collection chamber may have a temperature ranging from 600 to 1500° C. and a pressure of between 2 and 10 MPa. The syngas is preferably cooled, in the vessel according the present invention, to below a temperature which is 50° C. higher than the saturation temperature of the gas composition. More preferably the syngas is cooled to below a temperature which is 20° C. higher than the saturation temperature of the gas composition.
The syngas outlet 4 comprises a tubular part 6 having a diameter, which is smaller than the diameter of the tubular diptube 5. The tubular part 6 is oriented co-axial with the diptube 5 as shown in the Figure. The vessel 1 as shown in
The diptube 5 is open to the interior of the vessel 1 at its lower end 10. This lower end 10 is located away from the syngas collection chamber 2 and in fluid communication with a gas outlet 11 as present in the vessel wall 12. The diptube is partially submerged in a water bath 13. Around the lower end of the diptube 5 a draft tube 14 is present to direct the syngas upwardly in the annular space 16 formed between draft tube 14 and diptube 5. At the upper discharge end of the annular space 16 deflector plate 16a is present to provide a rough separation between entrained water droplets and the quenched syngas. Deflector plate 16a preferably extends from the outer wall of the diptube 5. The lower part 5b of the diptube 5 has a smaller diameter than the upper part 5a as shown in
The tubular part 6 is preferably formed by an arrangement of interconnected parallel arranged tubes resulting in a substantially gas-tight tubular wall running from a cooling water distributor to a header. The cooling of tubular part 6 can be performed by either sub-cooled water or boiling water.
The walls of the syngas collection chamber 2 preferably comprise an arrangement of interconnected parallel arranged tubes resulting in a substantially gas-tight wall running from a distributor to a header, said distributor provided with a cooling water supply conduit and said header provided with a discharge conduit for water or steam. The walls of the diptube are preferably of a simpler design, like for example a metal plate wall.
At the end of the diptube 5 which is nearest to the syngas collection chamber 2 a discharge conduit 19 is preferably present having an outflow opening for liquid water directed such that, in use, a film of water is achieved along the inner wall of the diptube. Discharge conduit 19 is connected to water supply conduit 17. Discharge conduit 19 will be described in detail by means of
Preferably the discharge conduit 19 or conduit 23 are connected to a vent. This vent is intended to remove gas, which may accumulate in said conduits. The ventline is preferably routed internally in the vessel 1 through the sealing 2c to be fluidly connected to annular space 2b. The lower pressure in said space 2b forms the driving force for the vent. The size of the vent line, for example by sizing an orifice in said ventline, is chosen such that a minimum required flow is allowed, possibly also carrying a small amount of water together with the vented gas into the annular space 2b. Preferably conduit 19 is provided with a vent as shown in
The circular supply conduit 23 of
The openings 24 preferably have an orientation under an angle β with the radius 25 of the closed circle, such that in use a flow of liquid water results in the discharge conduit 19 having the same direction has the flow in the supply conduit 23. Angle β is preferably between 45 and 90°.
The reference numbers in
The syngas outlet 4 consists of a frusto-conical part 35 starting from the lower end of the tubular wall 33 and converging to an opening 36. Preferably part 35 has a tubular part 35a connected to the outlet opening of said part 35 to guide slag downwards into the diptube 5. This is advantageous because one then avoids slag particles to foul the discharge conduit 19. If such a tubular part 35a would not be present small slag particles may be carried to the conduit 19 by recirculating gas. By having a tubular part of sufficient length such recirculation in the region of conduit 19 is avoided. Preferably the length of 35a is such that the lower end terminates at or below the discharge conduit 19. Even more preferably the lower end terminates below the discharge conduit 19, wherein at least half of the vertical length of the tubular part 35a extends below discharge conduit 19.
The frusto-conical part 35 and the optional tubular part 35a and 35b comprise one or more conduits, through which in use boiling cooling water or sub-cooled cooling water, flows. The design of the conduits of parts 35, 35a and 35b may vary and may be for example spirally formed, parallel formed, comprising multiple U-turns or combinations. The parts 35, 35a and 35b may even have separate cooling water supply and discharge systems. Preferably the temperature of the used cooling water or steam make of these parts 35 and 35a are measured to predict the thickness of the local slag layer on these parts. This is especially advantageous if the gasification process is run at temperatures, which would be beneficial for creating a sufficiently thick slag layer for a specific feedstock, such as low ash containing feedstocks like certain biomass feeds and tar sand residues. Or in situations where a coal feedstock comprises components that have a high melting point. The danger of such an operation is that outlet 4 may be blocked by accumulating slag. By measuring the temperature of the cooling water or the steam make one can predict when such a slag accumulation occurs and adjust the process conditions to avoid such a blockage. The invention is thus also directed to a process to avoid slag blockage at the outlet of the reaction chamber in a reactor as illustrated by
The frusto-conical part 35 is connected to the tubular part 6 near its lower end. Opening 36 has a smaller diameter than the diameter of the tubular part 6 such that liquid slag will less easily hit the wall of the tubular part 6 and or of the diptube 5 when it drops down into the water bath 13 and solidifies. In water bath 13 the solidified slag particles are guided by means of an inverted frusto-conical part 39 to outlet 15.
In
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
08170722.6 | Dec 2008 | EP | regional |
This application claims the benefit of European Application No. 08170722.6 filed Dec. 4, 2008 and U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/120,996 filed Dec. 9, 2008, both of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61120996 | Dec 2008 | US |