Process for high recovery of acetylene and lime from the...

Chemistry of inorganic compounds – Oxygen or compound thereof – Metal containing

Reexamination Certificate

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C048S216000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06294148

ABSTRACT:

STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT
(Not applicable)
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to an apparatus, control, and process for the production of acetylene and hydrated lime by the reaction of calcium carbide with water.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In a typical wet process for manufacture of acetylene from calcium carbide, particles of calcium carbide are introduced to an excess of water in a reactor vessel on a continuous or semi-continuous (on/off) basis. Water is added continuously to the reactor and acetylene and a hydrated carbide lime slurry are withdrawn from the reactor on a continuous basis. A system is provided for stirring the contents of the reactor to mix the calcium carbide with the water and to maintain a more-or-less uniform slurry of hydrated carbide lime. Because the reaction of calcium carbide with water is exothermic, the temperature must be controlled, typically by the rate at which fresh water is added. A greater rate of water addition results in cooler temperatures and a lesser rate of water addition results in warmer temperatures.
There are several undesirable characteristics of the process of the prior art. These in summary are:
1. Some acetylene yield is lost through the premature discharge of unreacted calcium carbide.
2. Some acetylene yield is lost through the solubility of acetylene in the large volume of water passing through the reactor.
3. Operational difficulties occur due to large, solid inert particles that enter the system and interfere with the stirring mechanism and discharge pumps and valves.
4. The overall process efficiency is reduced because a low concentration of hydrated lime in the discharge stream results in low contact times in the reactor and poor use of the reactor space.
5. The hydrated carbide lime value is reduced due to the presence of granular impurities and variable hydrated lime concentrations.
These characteristics are described further as follows:
Discharge of Unreacted Carbide (breakthrough)
In a typical reactor configuration the reaction kinetics are approximated by a Constant Flow Stirred Tank Reactor (CFSTR). According to Levenspiel, Chemical Reaction Engineering, 2nd Edition, John Wiley and Sons. Inc. 1972, Chapter 5, page 97. “[one type of] ideal steady-state flow reactor is called the mixed reactor, the backmix reactor, the ideal stirred tank reactor, or the CFSTR (constant flow stirred tank reactor) and, as the name suggests, it is a reactor in which the contents are well stirred and uniform throughout. Thus the exit stream from this reactor has the same composition as the fluid within the reactor. We refer to this type of flow as mixed flow, and the corresponding reactor, the mixed reactor, or the mixed flow reactor.” Most, if not all, commercially practiced wet acetylene processes approximate the CFSTR configuration.
In the CFSTR there is unreacted carbide that is mixed throughout the reactor. The particle size of the unreacted carbide varies from larger, recently introduced particles to smaller less-recently introduced particles that are nearing the completion of reaction. In an ideal CFSTR some of these smaller unreacted particles will be discharged with the hydrated lime slurry. Any acetylene generated by a particle after it has been discharged from the reactor may be lost to the atmosphere. The premature discharge of unreacted particles is referred to as “breakthrough” and, if the reaction kinetics are known, the extent to which breakthrough occurs can be estimated through calculations about an ideal CFSTR.
Practical evidence as well as theoretical calculations of CFSTR kinetics shows that this breakthrough can be significant. While the actual amount of breakthrough is affected by the particle size of the carbide feed, the hydrodynamic behavior of a carbide particle reacting to form acetylene, the internal configuration of the reactor and the inherent reactivity of the calcium carbide, the amount of breakthrough increases as the space velocity of the reactor increases. Space velocity is defined conventionally as the number of reactor volumes displaced in one hour.
FIG. 1
is a graph showing the mathematical relationship between the space velocity and breakthrough, assuming ideal behavior and relying on published data for CFSTR kinetics. For reactors of space velocities equaling four or greater (4000 liter/hr. in FIG.
1
), the ideal conversion is about 96% or less, which means that the breakthrough losses are greater than 4% of the acetylene that is produced from a given carbide feed. Most commercial reactors in operation today operate at a space velocity greater than four, which means that the breakthrough losses are even greater.
Dissolution Losses
Another problem with traditional technologies is the losses of acetylene to dissolution in water.
FIG. 2
shows the solubility of acetylene in water as a function of temperature for three commonly operated pressures. It may reasonably be assumed that the water of the hydrated lime discharge slurry is saturated in acetylene, and unless this water is recycled to the system, all of the acetylene dissolved in the water will eventually be lost to the atmosphere. The amount of acetylene contained in the discharge hydrated lime slurry can be calculated by knowing the amount of water exiting the reactor and its outlet temperature and pressure. Even if some of the water is recycled to the reactor the open vessels which serve as settling tanks to thicken the hydrated lime are exposed to the atmosphere and a large portion of the acetylene so dissolved is lost.
To illustrate, if pure calcium carbide (MW=64) is reacted to form acetylene (MW=26) with enough water to result in a 5% hydrated lime (MW=74) slurry, the amount of water flowing from the outlet per Kg of acetylene produced will be:
(
1
-
.05
)

74
0.05
*
26
=
54



Kg

-

Water

/

Kg

-

Acetylene
Assuming that the outlet temperature is 50° C. and the reactor pressure is 0.3 atm-gauge (a typical set of conditions), the amount of acetylene contained in 54 Kg of water is 0.09% or 0.05 Kg. Thus about 5% of the acetylene generated is lost to the atmosphere through the dissolution in water. This loss is in addition to the acetylene lost as a result of breakthrough of unreacted particles.
Operational Difficulties
Another problem with conventional technologies pertains to the operational difficulties created when non-reactive materials are introduced along with the calcium carbide. These unreactive materials, which are present in all commercially available calcium carbide materials, usually comprise inert coke, solid ferrosilicate and other metallic or mineral particles. These are materials introduced with the limestone or coke fed to the furnaces that manufacture calcium carbide and are carried through to the final product. These inert materials accumulate in the reactor and if not removed will eventually interfere with the stirring mechanism and discharge pumps or valves, causing mechanical breakdown. Smaller particles that do not rapidly settle are carried through to the settling tanks where they may accumulate, causing difficulties with the discharge system.
Loss of Process Efficiency
Another problem of traditional systems is that the concentration of hydrated lime in the reactor is kept low, usually below about 10 weight percent, to reduce premature settling of hydrated lime, i.e., to keep the slurry of the hydrated lime precipitate in a free-flowing state. If allowed to settle the hydrated lime would result in plugging of discharge lines or create unmanageable accumulations of hydrated lime in the reactor, or both. Low hydrated lime concentrations also result from the manner in which temperature is controlled. In a typical process, temperature is controlled at 50° C. If the temperature begins to rise, the usual procedure is to increase the rate of water feed, which brings down the temperature, but also has the undesirable result of further diluting the hydrated lime output stream. In hot weather, wh

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