Process and apparatus for exothermic reactions

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

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Details

422197, 422201, 422211, 422239, F28D 710

Patent

active

051907313

DESCRIPTION:

BRIEF SUMMARY
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a cooled reactor for carrying out catalytic reactions This reactor is of the kind comprising a cylindrical pressure shell, at least one tube sheet, means for passing the gaseous raw materials as a synthesis gas in a substantially radial direction through at least one catalyst bed provided with one or more cooling tubes for the indirect cooling of reacting gas, each cooling tube having a lower inlet end, an upper outlet end and an outer heat exchange wall.
The invention also relates to a process for carrying out exothermic reactions of gaseous raw materials in one or more catalyst beds in the reactor according to the invention.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Exothermic reactions often take place in catalytic conversions accomplished by passing a process stream of gaseous raw material through a bed of a solid catalyst under convenient pressure and temperature conditions. The synthesis of ammonia or methanol and the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis are important industrial examples of this kind of processes.
The heat of reaction evolved in exothermic reactions increases the temperature of the process stream and the catalyst and this often results in deterioration of the catalyst performance and in reduction of the concentration of intended products because the overall reaction rate responds vigorously to changes of the temperature and distribution of the temperature in the catalyst layer or bed. In case of reversible exothermic reactions, the equilibrium concentration of the product is declining with increasing temperatures, thus getting more unfavourable at high temperatures.
The temperature profile in the catalyst layer during exothermic reactions depends not only on the rate of the evolution of heat of reaction but also on the method of removing heat from the catalyst bed to avoid excessive elevation of the temperature of the reacting gaseous material and the catalyst.
Substantially three different methods are used for removing the heat of reaction from the catalyst bed: direct cooling by mixing with a cold feed gas; indirect cooling by heat exchangers; and using cooling tubes in the catalyst bed.
A method which is frequently used at present for removing excessive heat is heat exchange between a high temperature gas leaving the catalyst layer and a cold feed (synthesis) gas, thereby elevating the temperature of the feed gas to a level necessary for initiating the reaction. Gas-gas heat exchanging units are thereby usually disposed centrally in or after one or more catalyst beds. However, in this manner only minor parts of the catalyst bed will be at optimum temperature; and consequently, by this method large parts of the catalyst bed suffer from insufficient temperature control.
To remove heat of reaction more uniformly from the entire catalyst bed, there has been designed reaction vessels in the prior art which are provided with cooling tubes which extend through different regions of the catalyst bed. Thereby excessive heat is transferred to a cold feed gas or to an external cooling medium. The gas or medium which enters the cooling tubes extending through the catalyst bed absorbs the heat evolved in the reaction. As the temperature of the reacting gas in the catalyst bed increases, the temperature difference between the reacting gas and the cooling tubes will increase and the temperature will thereby in some regions of the catalyst bed exceed the temperature for a maximum reaction rate. Therefore, the temperature control is sluggish and temperature oscillations around the cooling tubes dampen out very slowly. Reactors based on such a design are the known counter-current axial flow ammonia converter of the Tennessee Valley Authority type (TVA) as described in Industry. Engn. Chem. 45 (1953), 1242 and the co-current axial flow ammonia converter of the Nitrogen Engineering Corporation, mentioned in Br. Chem. Eng. 8 (1963), 171.
Cooling of a radial flow reactor constitutes a special problem: in order to carry out the cooling surface has to be kept constant th

REFERENCES:
patent: 1741309 (1929-12-01), Jaeger
patent: 1953938 (1934-04-01), Jaeger
patent: 2639224 (1953-05-01), McAfee
patent: 3459511 (1969-08-01), Jotoku et al.
patent: 4321234 (1982-03-01), Ohsaki et al.
C. van Heerden, Autothermic Processes, Properties and Reactor Design--Mar. 30, 1953.
J. J. Hay and I. M. Pallai, Calculation Problems of Ammonia Synthesis Converters--Mar. 16, 1962.

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