Phosphoric Acid Process Selection
Phosphoric Acid Process Selection
Phosphoric Acid Process Selection
PHOSPHORIC ACID
PROCESS
Di, Hemi, & Hemi-Di Processes
for New Plants & Conversions
SUMMARY
Most of the worlds phosphoric acid is produced by either a dihydrate (Di), hemihydrate
(Hemi) or the hemi-dihydrate (Hemi-Di) process. Which process is best for that new
phosphoric acid plant? Should an existing plant be converted to another process? How
about converting and expanding in the same project? The answers dont come easily.
This presentation deals with issues to consider when making these decisions. Each
process has its advantages and disadvantages. Capital and operating costs for the
plant as a whole vary greatly depending on which process is selected. Entire plant
sections for grinding rock, handling of weak acid, or clarifying product acid are either
necessary or not, depending on the process. There major differences between
processes regarding size of facilities required to concentrate acid or to cool process
water. Operating costs vary greatly due to differences in energy efficiency, raw material
consumption, ability to consume water, and requirements for steam, cooling water, and
reagents.
Opportunities to recover valuable by-products are greatly affected by which process is
employed. Uranium recovery has recently re-emerged as an important issue, since
even environmentalists promote nuclear powers ecological advantages over fossil
fuels. Potential developments in uranium recovery from Hemi-Di plants might make this
even more attractive. The opposite is true for the Hemi process, which may be
incapable of practical uranium recovery. The Di process continues to be a proven
source for uranium recovery. The Hemi-Di process provides the highest quality gypsum
for a variety of gypsum utilization needs. The Di process can provide the greatest
recovery of fluosilicic acid.
This presentation highlights issues affecting capital and operating costs as well as byproduct recovery. The processes will be compared for new facilities and for potential
conversions of existing plants. A third area with quite different incentives is when an
existing facility might be expanded in capacity while converting to a new process.
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John Wing, P.E., 1121 Waters Edge Drive, Lakeland FL 33801, USA
Phone: 1-863-666-6555
Email: johnwingpe@verizon.net
SUMMARY
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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COMPARING PROCESSES
CAPITAL COST REACTOR/FILTER SYSTEM
CAPITAL COST OF OTHER PLANT SECTIONS
PHOSPHATE ROCK & SULFURIC ACID REQUIREMENT
ACID CONCENTRATION
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
AVOIDING ROCK GRINDING
OPERATOR, MAINTENANCE, AND CLEANING COST
OPERATING STABILITY
COOLING WATER REQUIREMENT
ACID STORAGE & CLARIFICATION
PHOSPHORIC ACID PURITY& Benefits to Fertilizer Analysis
REAGENT REQUIREMENTS
WATER CONSUMPTION INTO THE PROCESS
PROCESSING IMPURE ROCK
GYPSUM UTILIZATION
URANIUM RECOVERY
FLUOSILICIC ACID RECOVERY
EFFECT OF RECENT TRENDS
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DIHYDRATE PROCESS
This was the conventional process for most of the 20th century. Dihydrate plants have
made the phosphoric acid for most of the high analysis phosphate fertilizer that has ever
been produced. This process has a long track record or reliable operation, but it lacks
the energy efficiency and many of the operating advantages of the Hemi process. Most
phosphate rocks must be finely ground before processing.
Operating conditions in the Di process stay below the Hemi/Di transition boundary, but it
is economically necessary to push as deeply as practical into that boundary zone. The
filter product phosphoric acid is typically only 25-29% P205, so substantial further
concentration of product acid is required before making phosphate fertilizers.
Innovations have been used to expand capacity of some dihydrate plants to more than
double their original capacity.
HEMI-DI PROCESS
This advanced process begins with a Hemi reactor and Hemi filtration section, but it
adds a transformation reactor and a second filtration. The payoff for the added cost and
complication is extremely high recovery and high quality gypsum.
Hemi-Di advantages include:
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98-99% P205 recovery
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Very low sulfuric acid requirement
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Energy benefit from needing little or no steam to concentrate acid
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Eliminate 27-42% evaporators
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Usually eliminate rock grinding
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Low cooling water requirement
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Gypsum purity is suitable for making a variety of by-products
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Potential for enhanced uranium recovery (to be confirmed)
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Higher analysis fertilizer
OTHER PROCESSES
Other phosphoric acid processes including Di-Hemi and a short-cut Hemi-Di have also
found their niche. If thats not enough, ask someone from Prayon to explain the HemiDi-Hemi process. Jim Hebbard can amuse you regarding the FIPR process, which
operates in the mono-calcium phosphate mode. There are other processes that dont
even make gypsum, because they dont use sulfuric acid, (so what I said earlier about
phosphoric acid plants being gypsum plant isnt always true). This presentation will deal
with only the three most common processes Di, Hemi, and Hemi-Di. I dont know
much about the other processes to cover them adequately, although I once convinced a
client not to pursue a Di-Hemi process.
COMPARING PROCESSES
Selection of the optimum process requires careful evaluation of capital and operating
costs, requirements for raw materials and reagents, quality of products and by-products,
utility situation, opportunities to recover valuable raw materials, and a variety of other
issues. Every project has its own set of needs, costs and opportunities, so a detailed
evaluation is necessary to pick the process. Factors which often vary so greatly that
they have overwhelming influence on process selection include:
The main issues are discussed below in a qualitative manner, based on typical or
average situations. Any project that is being seriously considered should involve a
comprehensive evaluation of each of these issues, including cost information that is
specifically tailored to the site.
To help provide an overview of issues to consider, the three processes are rated in the
attached Di, Hemi, and Hemi-Di Processes Comparison Table on page 19. This table
relates to average situations, but one must recognize that any individual project may
have circumstances that are far from typical.
than those in Di plants. However, Hemi plants require more fume collection capacity
and efficiency than Di plants.
The entire reactor/filter system for a dihydrate process will usually be smaller and less
expensive than for a Hemi process. A Hemi-Di process requires a Hemi reactor/filter
system followed by a simpler and smaller dihydrate reactor/filter system. Consequently,
reactor/filter capital cost is very high in a Hemi-Di plant.
P205 Recovery Rankings for the three processes are typically as follows. High recovery
means low phosphate rock requirement.
1st:
HEMI-DI
High recovery 98-99% is the reason for this fancy process
2nd:
3rd:
A Hemi reactor needs significantly less sulfuric acid than a Di reactor, primarily because
of the reduced ratio of sulfate to phosphate in the reactor acid. Acid from Hemi reactors
typically contains 2% free SO4 and 43% P205 (a ratio of 0.46), whereas Di reactor acid is
typically 2% free SO4 and 27% P205 (a ratio of 0.74). Another small advantage with
Hemi is that slightly less sulfuric acid reacts with aluminum impurities. In the Yara
(Hydro) Hemi process these effects amount to needing about 2.5% less sulfuric acid
than with a Di process with similar recovery.
Sulfuric acid consumption will track with P205 recovery, except that Hemi & Hemi-Di
have about 2.5% advantage due primarily to low-sulfate product. The processes
typically rank in this order regarding sulfuric acid consumption: Hemi-Di, Hemi, and Di.
ACID CONCENTRATION
Most dihydrate phos acid plants make 25-29% P2O5 product. Higher product
concentration is impractical, because it would involve pushing operating conditions into
the unstable hemi/di transition boundary.
Hemi plants produce phosphoric acid directly from filtration at concentrations between
38% and 46% P2O5. Optimum concentration has been around 43% P2O5, which is near
the sweet spot where a Hemi plant performs best. Rapidly increasing energy value
may entice anyone who operates or designs a Hemi plant to raise product concentration
to further enhance energy efficiency. Higher product concentration would require
somewhat larger reactor and filters, and recovery might decline. However, these tradeoffs may be wise, considering the energy benefits to be gained.
Hemi-Di plants benefit from water balance and cake washing situations that make it
practical to make even higher concentrations of phosphoric acid ranging from 40% to
50% P2O5.
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ENERGY EFFICIENCY
Energy efficiency is essential in dealing with global warming. The Hemi process forte is
efficient use of energy. Its high product acid concentration avoids the need for the huge
quantity of evaporator steam that would otherwise be required to make product
concentration suitable for further processing. Ongoing trends of soaring energy costs
and need to conserve energy will further magnify this advantage in coming years.
The biggest source of energy for a typical phosphate chemical complex is sulfuric acid
production. Surplus heat from burning of sulfur is absorbed by steam, which is used to
generate all electric power required by the complex plus an export of power.
Energy efficiency of a phosphate complex is greatly enhanced by use of the Hemi
phosphoric acid process. A 1,500 T/D P2O5 phosphoric acid plant will save about 2500
T/D in evaporator steam by making filtered acid at 42% P2O5, compared to dihydrate
process acid at 26% P2O5. This surplus steam would typically be used to generate
electric power. Total electric power production is near 60 megawatts for a 1500 metric
T/D P2O5 phosphate complex. This is worth $35 to $50 million annually, based on
electric power values of 7 to 10 cents/kwh. The energy advantages of the hemihydrate
process account for about 16 megawatts of this power worth $9-15 million/year or
$18-30/ton of P2O5. The surplus electric power could be exported to the power grid for
sale, or it could be wheeled to the owners mine or other nearby facilities. Future
electric power values are likely to increase substantially as other sources of energy
become increasingly expensive.
A 1500 T/D Hemi or Hemi-Di plant would typically save another 3 MWs of electric power
by not having to grind rock, and by having much smaller acid evaporation requirement.
Hemi & Hemi Di plants also save the electric motor power that Di plants need to operate
additional evaporators, cooling water pumping, and acid handling facilities. Hemi-Di
plants do require substantial power for the second reactor and filters, thus offsetting part
of the motor power savings.
It is important to note that any utilization of energy from waste heat is environmentally
friendly. This electric power is produced with incremental net results of no pollution, no
greenhouse gas, no solid waste, and no consumption of fuel. No other source of
energy can top this for ecological responsibility - whether it uses coal, oil, gas,
nuclear fuel, wind, or solar energy.
Energy Efficiency rankings for the three processes would be:
1st:
HEMI
2nd:
HEMI-DI
3rd:
DI
OPERATING STABILITY
Either a hemihydrate or dihydrate process can operate stably if the conditions are
clearly in either the hemihydrate or dihydrate zone. The hemi/di transition zone is
illustrated in the Calcium Sulfate Crystallization Graph on page 6.
Dihydrate plants must limit reactor concentration in order to keep below a transition
zone between hemihydrate and dihydrate. When concentration or temperature gets a
little too high, the gypsum crystals form as a mixture of dihydrate and hemihydrate
crystals. These crystals are small, which reduces filtration rate. Wherever the slurry
cools, scale forms inside the reactor, pumps and piping. For economic reasons
dihydrate plants must push slightly into the transition zone, but good control can
minimize problems. If a dihydrate reactor is allowed to get seriously over optimum
temperature or concentration, filtration becomes extremely slow, and equipment scaling
is severe. Crystals in a typical dihydrate plant are a mixture of some hemihydrate
among mostly dihydrate crystals. Dihydrate plants tend to have far more scale formation
in reaction and flash cooling systems than hemi plants.
Hemi reactors have a major advantage, because they operate in a stable zone, well
above the hemi/di transition zone.
Substantial changes in temperature and
concentration can be tolerated without getting into the transition zone. Operating
control is less critical, and the reactor is more forgiving to upset conditions or sudden
changes in rock feed characteristics. This accounts for praise by those that operate the
plants that they are easier to operate, more stable, and more forgiving than dihydrate
plants. There is relatively little scale formation in the reactors and flash coolers,
because of operating in the stable zone, and because there is lower solubility of calcium
sulfate.
The Calcium Sulfate Crystallization Graph shows a hemi/anhydrite transition above
the hemi zone. In actual practice this transition is so high that it is rarely a problem,
except occasionally in some hemi-di plants which push reactor acid concentration to 4850% P205.
In a Hemi plant conditions in filtration pass thru the Hemihydrate/Dihydrate transition
line. Crossing this transition caused problems for early Hemi plants. However,
technology has been developed which allows this transition to be crossed with minimal
scaling in the filter system. Part of this technology has been use of an anti-scalant
reagent that greatly slows the conversion of hemihydrate crystals to dihydrate crystals,
thus reducing scaling. Anti-scalant is not always necessary, as was demonstrated at
Belledune, where the anti-scalant system was abandoned.
for 52-54% P205 evaporators in a dihydrate phos acid plant. Water at around 38oC
(1000F) will be adequate for scrubber water, equipment wash, etc., and more than
adequate for flash cooler condenser water. Hemi & Hemi-Di plant cooling pond and
associated pumps and piping are a fraction the size of comparable equipment in a Di
plant.
REAGENT REQUIREMENTS
Nearly all phosphoric acid reactors require defoamer, and I have not noticed significant
difference between Di and Hemi reactors. However, Arcadian/PCS found that when
using BuCraa rock from the Western Sahara region of Morocco, no defoamer was
required with the Di process or after conversion to the Hemi process.
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URANIUM RECOVERY
Phosphate rock contains uranium in concentrations up to a pound (half a kilogram) of
U3O8 per ton of rock. Uranium can be recovered by solvent extraction from phosphoric
acid from dihydrate plants containing about 25-29% P205. This extraction is preceded
by extensive clarification and pre-treatment of the phosphoric acid. Much uranium was
recovered from phosphoric acid a couple of decades ago. A sudden downturn in
uranium price forced recovery plants to shut down.
Now nuclear power plants are finding favor as economically and environmentally
attractive sources of electric power. Despite concerns about disposal of spent fuel,
nuclear power plants are often considered a more environmentally friendly power
source than fossil fuels. They emit no air or water pollution and no greenhouse gasses.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is handling 16 applications for nuclear power
plants in the USA, and expects to receive 32 by 2012.
Uranium prices have soared to double or triple what they were a couple decades ago.
Even so, uranium costs only a fraction as much as oil per unit of power produced.
The Di process has a proven track record of successful uranium recovery. The Hemi
process is not attractive for uranium recovery. Its high product acid concentration makes
uranium extraction difficult, and uranium content in the acid is low.
Uranium recovery might be exceptionally attractive with a Hemi-Di process. This is
because a high uranium-to-P205 ratio occurs in a certain weak acid filtrate stream with
the Hemi-Di process. It appears that it would be far easier to extract uranium from this
stream than with the conventional extraction from 27% P205 acid, and quantity of
uranium might increase. However, this process has yet to be proven and developed.
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DI
HEMI
HEMI
-DI
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Uranium Recovery
Gypsum Utilization
Fluosilicic Acid Recovery
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REMARKS
(for typical or average situations, with exceptions)
Di has smallest Reac. & Filt. H-D has 2 Rx & Filter stages
Hemi & H-D need no rock grinding, less evaporation,
acid storage, & cooling water
Di needs rock grinding & much evap. H-D: high recovery
Di needs rock grinding, much more steam & cooling water
Di 25-29% P2O5, Hemi 40-45%, H-D 40-50%
Hemi & Hemi-Di make DAP with little or no evaporation.
Di ~96%, Hemi ~95%, Hemi-Di ~98.5%
Hemi & H-D avoid handling 27% acid.
H-D has 2nd Rx & Filter
Works only where water recirculates from gypsum stack.
2% benefit to Hemi & H-D due to low SO4 in product, etc.
Di needs <0.4 mm (35 mesh).
Hemi & H-D can use <2 mm (9 mesh)
Hemi & H-D need no 42% evap. condenser water
Hemi & H-D have no 27% acid; often need no clarification
Hemi & H-D acid can make fertilizers with 2% more
%P2 O5
Di has smallest equip. H-D requires 2nd reactor & filters
Hemi may need anti-scalant
Hemi & Hemi-Di may use clay or silica.
Most existing plants are Di, but many are Hemi & H-D.
Di needs grinding, much evaporation, etc.
Hemi-Di has 2nd Reactor & Filters
Hemi-Di may be best, but needs development.
Hemi-Di gypsum is purest.
Hemi & H-D have no 27-42% evaps, hence less FSA.
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REFERENCES
Pierre Becker, Phosphates & Phosphoric Acid, 2nd Ed., Marcel Dekker Inc., NYC, 89.
BuShea, et al., Application of BSF Technologies CTC3 to a Phosphate Complex,
AIChE Natl Convention, Orlando, 3/90 and 1990 AIChE Clearwater Convention
J. David Crerar & Barry T. Crozier, Practical Retrofitting to the Hemihydrate Process
and Plant Performance Data, AIChE Meeting, Lakeland FL, Mar. 87.
B.T. Crozier, Fisons Hemihydrate Process - A Decade of Energy Savings, The
Fertilizer Institute Round Table, Atlanta, Oct.82.
John Gobbitt, Hemihydrate Phosphoric Acid Plant Retrofits at Geismar and Chinhae,
AIChE Clearwater Convention, May, 90.
Joseph W. Guida, Phosphoric Acid and Uranium Recovery - Take 3"
Fertilizer International, Jan-Feb., 2008
G.W. Hartman & L.J. Friedman, The Royster Power Program - Start-up and Initial
Operating Experience AIChE Convention, New Orleans LA, April,86.
Sam Houghtaling & John Wing, Hemi or Hemi-Di - Our Future, AIChE Spring National
Meeting, New Orleans LA, April,92.
Sam Houghtaling & John Wing Hemi or Hemi-Di? - Arcadian Converts Phos Acid Plant
from Dihydrate to Hemi, AIChE Clearwater Convention, May,91.
John Wing, The Hemi Era in Phosphoric Acid, AIChE Clearwater Convention, June,06
John Wing, From Phosphate Rock to DAP at Lower Cost, AIChE Clearwater
Convention, May,99.
John Wing, The Case for Converting Phos Acid Plants to Hemi, AIChE Clearwater
Convention, May,95.
John Wing, Hemihydrate Phosphoric Acid Plant Conversion at Belledune, Canada,
AIChE Meeting, Lakeland FL, Oct.,87.
John Wing, Florida Phosphate Technology - 2000", AIChE Clearwater Conv., May,89.
Anonymous, Hemi Forever? Fertilizer International, July-Aug. 2007, pages 43-48.
Anonymous, HiTech Solutions, Inc. - Contractor Profile. Phosphorus & Potassium
magazine, Jan.-Feb. 93, page 26.
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John Wing, P.E., 1121 Waters Edge Drive, Lakeland FL 33801, USA
Phone: 1-863-666-6555
Email: johnwingpe@verizon.net
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