Olifin
Olifin
Olifin
PRODUCTION OF OLEFINS
Plastics production and consumption Family portrait of olefin technologies Feed stocks Crude Oil Coal Natural gas Biomass Waste recycling CO2 Cracking operations Steam cracking Coking Hydrocracking Fluidized catalytic cracking Ethylene producing methods Propylene producing methods Recent technology advances
PRODUCTION OF OLEFINS
Metathesis OCT SHOP Gas to liquid (GTL) Syn-gas Fischer-Tropsch Methane to Olefins Methanol routes Methanol to propylene Oxidative coupling of Methane Dehydrogenation Oxidative Dehydrogenation Catalytic Pyrolysis Summaries of Gas to Olefins routes Biomass Waste recycling CO2 Considerations regarding technologies: green ethylene, process energy consumption, process CO2 production. 3
Bio-acid acetone to hydrocarbons (e.g. olefins). Catalytic Cracking or Catalytic Pyrolysis. Deep Catalytic Cracking, etc. De-hydration process (e.g. methanol to olefins, methanol to propylene and ethanol dehydration). Fermentation Flash pyrolysis, sometimes in the presence of methane. Fischer-Tropsch synthesis (using syngas CO and H2 mixture to synthesize methanol or other products). Gasification and liquefaction. Gas stream reactor technologies, e.g. shockwave reactors. Hydrogenation Hydro-Pyrolysis Hydro-Thermal Upgrading Liquefaction which produces naphtha from biomass feedstock. Oxidative coupling of methane via ethane. Oxidative Dehydrogenation of ethane. Olefin Metathesis, e.g. ABB-Lummus Olefin Conversion Technology, IFP-CPC meta-4. Olefins Upgrading (conversion of C4- C10) to light olefins, e.g. Superflex, Propylur and Olefins Cracking. Propane dehydrogenation. Re-cycling pyrolysis using organic waste, such as discarded plastics, used rubber, etc. Recovery of refinery off gases, which contains ethylene, propylene, propane, etc. Refinery processes. Distillation of crude oil produces naphtha and heavy oil. Catalytic cracking produces off gases. Cryogenic separation and absorption produces ethane and LPG. Steam cracking (conventional). Gas separation process which produces methane, ethane and propane. Steam Reforming of natural gas to produce methanol. Include light olefins and non-olefin chemicals. Light olefins are ethylene, propylene, butadiene and butylene. Non-olefin chemicals are mostly aromatics (and a small amount of C5+ hydrocarbons) in the case of steam cracking routes and mostly gasoline (and a small amount of butanes and C5+) in the case of C1 routes. Backflows from naphtha steam cracking to the refinery (810% yield on a mass basis) are of very low economic value and are therefore not counted as Olefins conversion technology. Liquefied petroleum gas. Liquid mixtures of hydrocarbons, i.e. a distillation product from petroleum or coal tar, a broad term encompassing any volatile, flammable liquid hydrocarbon mixture. Naphtha is used primarily as feedstock. Fermentation
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[3]
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Gasification and liquefaction. Flash pyrolysis, sometimes in the presence of methane. Fischer-Tropsch synthesis to synthesize methanol or other products.
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Natural gas
Natural gas is a gas consisting primarily of methane. It is found associated with fossil fuels, in coal beds, as Methane Clathrates, and is created by methanogenic organisms in marshes, bogs, and landfills. The by-products of natural gas processing include ethane, propane, butanes, pentanes and higher molecular weight hydrocarbons, elemental sulfur, and sometimes helium and nitrogen. Acid gas = CO2 , SH2 NGL = Natural Gas Liquids Tail gas = CO2 + leftover S-compounds from Claus process. Dehydration = Remove water vapor using either the regenerable absorption in liquid triethylene glycol (TEG), or a Pressure Swing Adsorption (PSA) unit which is regenerable adsorption using a solid adsorbent. [5]
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Natural gas
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Gas separation process which produces methane, ethane and propane; Steam Reforming of natural gas to produce methanol. Oxidative coupling of methane via ethane Oxidative Dehydrogenation of ethane
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Methane hydrates/clathrates
ice-like combinations of methane and water on the sea floor, found in vast quantities) are a potential future source of methane
MethaneHydratePhases
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Gasification and liquefaction Flash pyrolysis, sometimes in the presence of methane Fermentation Hydrogenation Fischer-Tropsch synthesis to synthesize methanol or other products
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Recycling of plastic materials via retro polymerization. Recycling of plastic materials via flash pyrolysis. RCY: Re-cycling pyrolysis using organic waste, such as discarded plastics, used rubber, etc.
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Hydrogenation De-hydration process (e.g. methanol to olefins, methanol to propylene and ethanol dehydration) Olefins Upgrading (conversion of C4- C10) to light olefins, e.g. Superflex, Propylur and Olefins Cracking.
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Steam cracking
Steam cracking and its products have a backbone status for many industrial sectors. The worldwide demand and production of olefins are higher than for any other chemicals. In general, steam cracking plays a dominant role in olefin production.[6]
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C2 compounds, or ethylene and ethane, separation often requires large distillation columns with 120180 trays and high reflux ratios. Steam cracking performance has improved considerably over time. Now steam crackers typically obtain: ~85% ethylene selectivity 60% ethane conversion Unreacted alkane is recycled after cryogenic separation, an expensive process. Undesired acetylene is removed through catalytic hydrogenation or extractive distillation.
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Decoking
Decoking Regular decoking is required in various parts of the pyrolysis section. Before decoking, the furnace has to be shut down. High pressure steam and air are fed to the furnace while it is heated up to 880900 C, or even up to 1100 C. Coke on the inner surfaces of the wall and tubes is either burned off, washed away with high pressure water or removed mechanically. Decoking process can take 2040 h for a naphtha steam cracker. Depending on the feedstocks, coil configuration and severity, decoking for steam cracking furnaces is required every 14100 days on an average. Typically, a naphtha pyrolysis furnace is decoked every 1540 days. Maximum cycle time is around 60100 days. Decoking is also required for quench towers and other sections.
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i)
Is associated with zeolite catalysts, FCC-like riser/bed reactors and heavy feedstocks.
ii)
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Simplified energy profile of conventional steam cracking and catalytic olefin technologies
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Simplified energy profile of conventional steam cracking and catalytic olefin technologies
First - lower activation energy
Catalysts provide an alternative route to steam cracking with the use of lower activation energy for CC bonds rupture. Most of the catalysts cannot withstand extremely high temperatures and pressures as in steam cracking. Temperatures for the catalytic naphtha cracking processes are 150250 C lower than those for steam crackers.
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FCC Schema
Adiabatic process = A process in which no heat is transferred to or from the working fluid. Endothermic = A process or reaction that absorbs energy in the form of heat. Catalyst regeneration and decoking is an exothermic reaction with oxygen.
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Olefin Metathesis. Steam cracking. Catalytic Cracking or Catalytic Pyrolysis. Propane dehydrogenation, Dehydrogenation, Oxidative dehydrogenation. 41
Olefin metathesis
Derived from the Greek words meta (change) and thesis (position), metathesis is the exchange of parts of two substances. In the reaction, AB + CD -> AC + BD
AB +AB>BB+AA
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M R1 R1 R2 R2 R2 R1
M R1 R2 R2
M R1 R1
R2
R R
M
R R
Grubbs
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[M]
R1
+
R1
(a)
R1
[M]
R1 R1
M
R1 R1 R1
(b)
[M]
R1 R1
Catalysts development
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Catalysts development
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1-Butene in the feedstock is isomerized to 2-butene as the original 2-butene is consumed in the metathesis reaction. The conversion of butene is above 60% per passThe selectivity for propene is >90%.
MgO catalyst
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Production of 1-hexene
A semi-works unit using the OCT (olefins conversion technology) process is used at Sinopecs olefin plant in Tianjin (China), for the metathesis of butene to produce 3-hexene, which is then isomerized into 1-hexene (comonomer used in the production of polyethene).
+ +
Isomerization
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Shell Chemicals total worldwide SHOP production capacity is 1,190,000 t of linear alpha and internal olefins per year; these are sold under the trade name Neodene. [7]
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The choice of reformer technology will have an influence: - On the thermal efficiency of the plant as a whole. - On the capital costs of the reformer, oxygen plant (where applicable) and the FischerTropsch section. One of the biggest challenges is to optimize the energy integration between the syngas generation and syngas conversion sections.
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H = + 206,2 kJ/mol
Additional hydrogen can be recovered by a lower-temperature gas-shift reaction with the carbon monoxide produced.
H = -41,2 kJ/mol
The hydrogen must be separated from the CO2 to be able to use it. This is primarily done by Pressure Swing adsorption (PSA), amine scrubbing and membrane reactors
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Due to the absence of catalyst, the reformer operates at an exit temperature of about 1400 C. Have the following disadvantages as compared to an autothermal reformer. - Formation of soot and much higher levels of ammonia and HCN, which necessitates the use of a scrubber to clean the gas. - Higher oxygen consumption. - Due to the absence of the watergas shift reaction, the unconverted methane as well as the methane produced by the FischerTropsch reaction cannot be recycled to the reformer without removing the CO from the Fischer Tropsch tail gas.
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Steam reformer + Autothermal reformer. Better energy utilization than the individual parts. The thermal efficiency of the GTL plant can be improved by about 12%. Less expensive than steam reforming. More expensive than autothermal reforming. The choice between combined and autothermal reforming will depend on the cost of the natural gas.
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Fischer-Tropsch process
The Fischer-Tropsch process is a catalyzed chemical reaction. Synthesis gas (syngas = carbon monoxide and hydrogen), is converted into liquid hydrocarbons of various forms. The most common catalysts are based on Fe and Co (Ni and Ru have also been used). The process involves a variety of competing chemical reactions. (2n+1)H2 + nCO -> CnH(2n+2) + nH2O
Most of the alkanes produced tend to be straight-chained, although some branched alkanes are also formed. In addition to alkane formation, competing reactions result in the formation of alkenes, as well as alcohols and other oxygenated hydrocarbons. Usually, only relatively small quantities of these non-alkane products are formed, although catalysts favoring some of these products have been developed.
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Fischer-Tropsch process
Another important reaction is the water gas shift reaction: H 2O + CO -> H2 + CO2 It should be noted that, according to published data on the current commercial implementations of the coal-based Fischer-Tropsch process, these plants can produce as much as 7 tons of CO2 per tons of liquid hydrocarbon products (excluding the reaction water product). This is due in part to the high energy demands required by the gasification process, and in part by the design of the process as implemented. Process conditions 150-300oC. Higher temperatures lead to faster reactions and higher conversion rates, but also tend to favor methane production. Increasing the pressure leads to higher conversion rates and also favors formation of long-chained alkanes both of which are desirable. Typical pressures are in the range of one to several tens of atmospheres. Chemically, even higher pressures would be favorable, but the benefits may not justify the additional costs of highpressure equipment.
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The catalysts used are mostly oxides of alkali, alkaline earth and other rare earth metals. Hydrogen and steam are sometimes added to reduce coking on catalysts. After one pass, roughly 80% of the total oxygen feed by mass is consumed. The per-pass ethylene yield on a mass basis of methane is about 30%. [9]
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H2 O
Oxidative dehydrogenation
ODH is Exothermal. Dehydrogenation and Cracking are Endothermal. Process simplicity. (a) The combination of exothermal alkane combustion with the endothermal dehydrogenation, at temperatures higher than 700 oC. The use of O2 enables to overcome thermodynamic limitations and to avoid catalyst regeneration. (b) A true ODH occurring with redox-type catalysts already at temperatures lower than 500 oC. Amongst the catalysts used, the most investigated ones are those based either on vanadium oxide or on molybdenum oxide.
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Gasification and liquefaction Flash pyrolysis, sometimes in the presence of methane Fermentation Hydrogenation Fischer-Tropsch synthesis to synthesize methanol or other products
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Biomass Gasification
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Char: is the solid material that remains after light gases (e.g. coal gas) and tar (e.g. coal tar) have been driven-out or released from a carbonaceous material, during the initial stage of combustion, which is known as carbonization, charring, devolatilization or pyrolysis. 71
Recycling of plastic materials via retro polymerization. Recycling of plastic materials via flash pyrolysis. RCY: Re-cycling pyrolysis using organic waste, such as discarded plastics, used rubber, etc.
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Mechanism of the hydrogenolysis of polyethylene (according to Dufaud and Basset). P = polymer chain.
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Hydrogenation De-hydration process (e.g. methanol to olefins, methanol to propylene and ethanol Olefins Upgrading (conversion of C4- C10) to light olefins, e.g. Superflex, Propylur and
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CO2 recycling
How to collect the CO2? Carbon dioxide scrubbing based on potassium carbonate exists. - Single Step methods: CO2 + H2 Methanol, green methanol - Single Step methods: CO2 Hydrocarbons - 2 Step methods: CO2 , CO Hydrocarbons If CO2 is heated to 2400oC, it splits into carbon monoxide and oxygen. The Fischer-Tropsch process can then be used to convert the CO into hydrocarbons.
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CO2 - Methane
The Sabatier process As originally reported by Sabatier in 1902, it is well known that CO2 can be reduced by H2 over a catalyst as: CO2 + 4 H2 -> CH4 + 2 H2O The global Sabatier reaction, which is reversible and exothermic H = -167 kJ/mol, proceeds catalytically at relatively low temperatures on a catalyst. At elevated temperatures and pressures in the presence of a nickel catalyst. Optionally ruthenium on alumina (aluminum oxide) makes a more efficient catalyst.
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2 H2O + ->
H298K =
68.3 kcal/mol
Photohydrogen - Biological hydrogen production from Algae and Bacteria. - Photoelectrochemical cell.
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Bio-mass BioEthanol
Bacteria(Clostridiumacetobutylicum) Processchemistry
BioButanol GreenButanol
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Ethanol to butanol
2 H3C-CH2-OH ->{HAP}-> H3C-CH2-CH2-CH2-OH + H2O Nonstoichiometric Hydroxyapatite HAP is represented by the formula Ca10z(HPO4)z(PO4)6-z(OH)2-z - nH2O; 0 < z - 1, n = 0-2.5 Effect of reaction temperature on yields of various alcohols from ethanol on HAP (Ca/P ratio ) 1.64), contact time 1.78 s. With maximum selectivity of 76% for Butanol.
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Conclusions
Energy use and CO2 emissions in all C1 routes are much higher than those of steam cracking. Methane-based routes use more than twice as much process energy than state-of-the-art steam cracking routes do. Methane based routes lead to 6085% more CO2 emission than the state-of-the-art ethane cracking. Among the methanol-related routes, UOP MTO is the most efficient, but its energy use is still about 150% higher compared to state-ofthe-art naphtha-based steam cracking. Methanol-related routes have similar energy use, but cause slightly higher CO2 emissions than DSM OCM I and II do.
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Conclusions
By conducting a comparative analysis of the energy use, CO2 emissions and production costs of C1 technologies and steam cracking, we found that methane-based routes use more than twice as much than process energy than state-of-the-art steam cracking routes do (the energy content of products is excluded). Oxidative coupling routes are currently still immature due to low ethylene yields and other problems. The methane-based routes can be economically attractive in remote, gas-rich regions where natural gas is available at low prices. The development of liquefied natural gas (or LNG) may increase the prices of natural gas in those locations. While several possibilities for energy efficiency improvement do exist, none of these natural gas-based routes is likely to become more energy efficient or lead to less CO2 emissions than steam cracking routes do.
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Sources
[1] The Compelling Facts About Plastics, An analysis of plastics production, demand and recovery, for 2005 in Europe - Published Spring 2007 [2] Galli, Journal of Polymer Science, Part A, Polymer Chemistry, 42 (2004), 396-415 [3] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crude_oil [4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal [5] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_gas
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Sources
[6] Ren T., Patel M., Blok K., Energy (Amsterdam Netherlands) (2005) Volume Date 2006 31(4) 425-451, Olefins from conventional and heavy feedstocks, Energy use in steam cracking and alternative processes. [7] Refs\Belgiorno V., De Feo G., Della Rocca C., Napoli R.M.A., Waste Management (Amsterdam Netherlands) (2003) 23(1) 1-15, Energy from gasification of solid wastes.pdf [8] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gas_to_liquids [9] Ren T., Patel M.K., Blok K., Energy (Oxford United Kingdom) (2008) 33(5) 817-833, Steam cracking and methane to olefins, Energy use CO2 emissions and production costs
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Sources
[10] Ren T., Patel M., Blok K., Energy (Amsterdam Netherlands) (2005) Volume Date 2006 31(4) 425-451, Olefins from conventional and heavy feedstocks, Energy use in steam cracking and alternative processes. [11] Refs\Belgiorno V., De Feo G., Della Rocca C., Napoli R.M.A., Waste Management (Amsterdam Netherlands) (2003) 23(1) 1-15, Energy from gasification of solid wastes.pdf [12] Newborough M., Highgate D., Vaughan P., Applied Thermal Engineering (2002) 22(17) 1875-1883, Thermal depolymerization of scrap polymers.pdf [13] www.sunbayenergy.com/faq_plasma.html
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