Apparatus for pollution control in exhaust gas streams from...

Chemical apparatus and process disinfecting – deodorizing – preser – Chemical reactor – Ammonia synthesizer

Reexamination Certificate

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C422S186220, C422S234000, C422S242000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06616901

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Much of the electrical power used in homes and businesses throughout the world is produced in power plants that burn a fossil fuel (i.e. coal, oil, or gas) in a boiler. The resulting hot exhaust gas (also sometimes termed “flue gas”) turns a gas turbine or boils water to produce steam, which turns a steam turbine, and the turbine cooperates with a generator to produce electrical power. To achieve good thermal efficiency for the power plant, the hot exhaust gas flows from the boiler through a heat exchanger (also sometimes termed an “air preheater”) in which the air input flow to the boiler is preheated. The partially cooled exhaust gas is directed to the exhaust stack.
An important consideration for modern power plants is the cleanup of the exhaust gas. The exhaust gas produced in the boiler contains gaseous pollutants such as nitrogen oxides (“NOx”) and sulfur oxides (“SOx”), as well as particulates termed “fly ash”. Environmental laws establish permissible levels of gaseous pollutants and particulates that may be emitted from the exhaust stack of the plant. Various types of pollution-control equipment are therefore available to reduce the levels of gaseous pollutants and particulates from the exhaust gas before it reaches the exhaust stack. For example, among other methods, NOx is often removed by selective catalytic reduction (SCR) and/or selective non-catalytic reduction SNCR, and fly ash is often removed by an electrostatic precipitator (ESP) and/or a baghouse. The invention herein deals with those particular pollution control systems which utilize ammonia within the process in order to initiate, cause and/or supplement the process.
SCR is the catalyst mediated reduction of NOx with ammonia and provides the highest NOx removal efficiency of all NOx control technologies. In this process, ammonia is injected into the flue gas as a reagent for reducing NOx. On the catalyst surface absorbed ammonia reacts with NOx to form molecular nitrogen and water vapor:
4NH
3
+4NO+O
2

CAT
4N
2
+6H
2
O
8NH
3
+6NO
2

CAT
7N
2
+12H
2
O
NOx reduction efficiencies of up to 95% are possible with a properly tuned and sized conventional SCR system on a boiler and, in this regard, in many situations, SCR is often the preferred and/or the only practical technology available to provide compliance within the parameters established by the applicable emission control laws. Other SCR bases NOx reduction technologies of the type described above are used in so-called staged systems (i.e. SNCR used in conjunction with in-duct SCR and/or air preheaters having catalyzed heat transfer elements) and SCR for combined and simple cycle gas turbine applications. In all such instances, a key ingredient in the system operation is the safe, economic and reliable availability of ammonia
Other pollution control systems used in power plants, and heavy industry applications, which require the heavy utilization of ammonia, include: injection of ammonia for flue gas conditioning to assist in the removal of fly ash (see U.S. Pat. Nos. 4.064,219, 5,034,030, and 5,567,226); ammonia injection in situations where the fuel is a high sulfur content coal or oil which cause a so called “blue plume” because of excessive SO
3
(in such situations the ammonia usage reduces the blue plume by removing excessive SO
3
by formation of ammonium sulfate and bisulfate, see U.S. Pat. No. 5,024,171); ammonia based SNCR systems (see U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,900,554, 4,507,269, and 4,636,370); and in conjunction with SCR systems applied in combined cycle combustion turbines. Once again, a key driving ingredient in all such systems is the safe, economic and reliable availability of ammonia.
Ammonia for uses such as described above, are generally delivered to power plants in the form of anhydrous ammonia, or aqueous ammonia. Anhydrous Ammonia is used in massive quantities world-wide for many industrial and agricultural purposes. Ammonia is gas at ambient temperatures and pressures, and is normally shipped and stored as a liquid, either in pressure vessels at ambient temperature, and high pressure (i.e. over 16 bars), or in refrigerated vessels at ambient or nearly ambient pressure, and at about −33° C. It is transported in bulk in ships, barges, and railroad tank cars, and in tank trucks on public roads and highways. It is frequently stored in large quantities at industrial sites in populated areas and is frequently used as the working fluid in large refrigeration systems. It is now coming into wider use for the removal of NOx from flue gas at power generating stations in urban areas.
Anhydrous ammonia is an extremely hazardous, toxic, and volatile material. In the event of an accidental discharge, it can cause immediate death to humans and animals and rapid death to trees and plants. Both anhydrous liquid ammonia, and concentrated aqueous liquid ammonia, display a deadly characteristic which substantially increases the risk of widespread injury and death in case of a spill. Specifically, upon sudden release to the atmosphere, as might occur in a sudden and accidental discharge (i.e. a storage failure at a power plant, a train wreck, or a traffic accident), the ammonia forms a cloud produced of an aerosol fog of liquid ammonia droplets. Unlike gaseous ammonia, which, though toxic, is lighter than air and quickly dissipates to harmless concentrations, the cloud can persist for a surprisingly long time, as long as several hours, before it finally disappears. The cloud is typically heavier than air and tends to drift along the surface of the earth, i.e., the ground or the surface of a body of water. The cloud moves with the wind and can sweep over a total area, i.e., a “footprint,” much larger than the area covered by the cloud at any one moment. Contact with the cloud is instantly incapacitating, and a single breath can be fatal. Substantial numbers of bulk shipments of anhydrous ammonia routinely move through or near densely populated areas. It is estimated that an anhydrous ammonia spill from a 40,000 pound truck trailer would generate a cloud having an average lethal footprint of 29 acres, that is, an area of 29 acres in which the concentration of ammonia would reach a lethal level, about 0.5 percent, before the cloud eventually dissipated. Although this is an extreme example, it is interesting to note that a large SCR installation with ammonia demands of 3,000 pounds per hour, and a 5 day supply of ammonia reserve supply, will require on-site storage of approximately 360,000 pounds of this very toxic, volatile, and difficult to handle chemical.
In addition to the inherent danger of storing, transporting and handling large quantities of ammonia, the expense insofar as safety aspects, insurance costs, specialized training, and the difficult to quantify emotional exposure of living and working next to a such potential catastrophe, it is apparent that if another, less hazardous commodity could be transported instead of ammonia, and then be readily converted back to ammonia, the hazards associated with ammonia shipment and handling would be considerably reduced. To some extent, attempts have been made in the supply of ammonia for NOx control in power plant environments by substituting concentrated aqueous liquid ammonia for anhydrous ammonia. Such a solution has achieved only limited success, due to any number of factors, for example: the high energy cost of vaporizing the water carrier, relatively costly storage facilities; and, even though aqueous ammonia is safer to handle than anhydrous ammonia, it is still very difficult and costly to handle in a safe manner.
Urea is an ideal candidate as an ammonia substitute. Urea is a non-toxic chemical compound and, for purposes of this discussion, presents essentially no danger to the environment, animals, plant life and human beings. It is solid under ambient temperatures and pressures. Consequently, urea can be safely and inexpensively shipped in bulk and stored for long periods of time until it is converted into ammonia. It will not leak, e

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