Presentations 15
Presentations 15
Presentations 15
July 2010
Contents
Part 1
2.
3.
4.
5.
Supercritical CO2
Supercritical carbon dioxide is gaining popularity for de-caffeinate coffee.
Supercritical CO2 is forced through the green coffee beans and then they are
sprayed with water at high pressure to remove the caffeine. The caffeine can then be
isolated for resale (e.g. to the pharmaceutical industry or to beverage manufacturers)
by passing the water through activated charcoal filters or by distillation, crystallization
or reverse osmosis.
Supercritical CO2 extraction coupled with a fractional separation technique is used
by producers of flavors and fragrances to separate and purify volatile flavor and
fragrances concentrates.
Supercritical carbon dioxide can be used in dry cleaning of clothes, as a substitute
for conventional solvents.
Welding
Carbon dioxide is also used in welding, where in the welding arc, it reacts to oxidize
most metals. Use in the automotive industry is common where it is used as a
welding gas primarily because it is much less expensive than more inert gases such
as argon or helium.
When used for MIG welding, CO2 use is sometimes referred to as MAG welding,
standing for Metal Active Gas; as CO2 can react at these high temperatures. It
tends to produce a hotter puddle than truly inert atmospheres, improving the flow
characteristics.
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Part 2
Urea
Methanol
Soda Ash
Polycarbonates
Gas to Liquids (GTL)
DME
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Urea Production
For use in industry, urea is produced from synthetic ammonia and carbon dioxide.
Large quantities of carbon dioxide are produced during the manufacture of ammonia
from coal or from hydrocarbons such as natural gas and petroleum-derived raw
materials. Such point sources of CO2 facilitate direct synthesis of urea.
The various urea processes are characterized by the conditions under which urea
formation takes place and the way in which unconverted reactants are further
processed. The process consists of two main equilibrium reactions, with incomplete
conversion of the reactants.
The first is an exothermic reaction of liquid ammonia with CO2 to form (H2NCOONH4):
2 NH3 + CO2 H2N-COONH4
The second is an endothermic decomposition of ammonium
carbamate into urea and water:
H2N-COONH4 (NH2)2CO + H2O
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Urea Production
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Urea Production
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Urea Production
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Urea Production
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Urea Production
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Urea Production
Vietnam
Client: Petrovietnam Fertilizer and
Chemicals Corporation
(PETROVIETNAM)
CO2 source: Natural gas boiler &
steam reformer
Start up: Q3 2010 (under construction)
Capacity: 240 tpd
Product: Urea production
MHI Scope: License Package &
Proprietary Equipment Supply
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Methanol Production
The largest use of methanol by far is in making other chemicals. About 40% of methanol is converted to formaldehyde, and
from there into products as diverse as plastics, plywood, paints, explosives, and permanent press textiles. Methanol is used on
a limited basis to fuel internal combustion engines.
Today, synthesis gas is most commonly produced from the methane component in natural gas rather than from coal. Three
processes are commercially practiced. At moderate pressures of 4 MPa (40 atm) and high temperatures (around 850 C),
methane reacts with steam on a nickel catalyst to produce syngas according to the chemical equation:
CH4 + H2O CO + 3 H2
This reaction, commonly called steam-methane reforming or SMR, is endothermic and the heat transfer limitations place limits
on the size of and pressure in the catalytic reactors used. Methane can also undergo partial oxidation with molecular oxygen to
produce syngas, as the following equation shows:
2 CH4 + O2 2 CO + 4 H2
This reaction is exothermic and the heat given off can be used in-situ to drive the steam-methane reforming reaction. When the
two processes are combined, it is referred to as autothermal reforming. The ratio of CO and H2 can be adjusted to some extent
by the water-gas shift reaction,
CO + H2O CO2 + H2
The carbon monoxide and hydrogen then react on a second catalyst to produce methanol. Today, the most widely used catalyst
is a mixture of copper, zinc oxide, and alumina. At 510 MPa (50100 atm) and 250 C, it can catalyze the production of
methanol from carbon monoxide and hydrogen with high selectivity:
CO + 2 H2 CH3OH
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REFORMER
COMPRESSION
SYNTHESIS
DISTILLATION
FLUE GAS
CO2
RECOVERY
REFORMER
COMPRESSION
SYNTHESIS
DISTILLATION
FLUE GAS
CO2
RECOVERY
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77
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2010 Pakistan
340 t/d
22
2005 Japan
330 t/d
2010 Bahrain
450 t/d
99
2010 Vietnam
240 t/d
KEY
Plants under operation
66
Plants under construction
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2009 India
450 t/d
11
1999 Malaysia
22
200 t/d
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CO2
CO2 Capture
Exhaust gas
Natural Gas
Steam
DME
Synthetic fuel
Boiler
Compressor
Methanol synthesis
DME synthesis
2CH3OH CH3OCH3+H2O
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Fuel
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Part 3
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CO2
CO2
Compression
Capture & Dehydration
Associated
Gas
Separator
CO2
Injection Production
Well
Well
CO2
CO2
Recycle
Plant
Tank
Natural Gas
NGL
Crude Oil
Cap Rock
Gas
CO2
Crude Oil
Oil Reservoir
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CO2
Recovery
Plant
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McElmo
Dome
St. John
Dome
Sheep
Mountain
Bravo
Dome
Ammonia
Plant
Gas
Plants
Jackson
Dome
CO2 Sources
Natural
Industrial
Pipelines
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Part 4
Greenhouses
Micro Algae Bio diesel
Kelp in sea water Bio diesel
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Greenhouses
CO2 has long been used to enhance the production and growth of a variety of
vegetables, fruit and flowers in greenhouses throughout the world and especially in
Europe. Pure CO2 is injected via a tank into greenhouses whereby the plants within
rapidly utilise the CO2 in combination with sunlight and heat which enhances growth
along with fruit and flower production even in cool climates.
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Part 5
1.
2.
38
Feed ( NG ) or (Coal)
Reduction Gas
Production
Unit
&
H/R
DRI Reactor
Compressor
H2O
H2
CO
H2
CO
Heater
Cooler
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Fuel
and O2
DRI Pellet
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Yearly market
(Mt/yr)
Urea
90
65
Methanol
24
<8
2.6
0.2
10
<10
10
10
Food
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Shikoku Electric
Tachibana-wan power
station
(MHIs DCFS FGD)
Mihara 400 MW
Multi-Pollutant Test Facility
(FGD & CO2 Capture )
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Final Words
FOR THE SUSTAINED LONG TERM USE OF FOSSIL FUELS FOR
CLEANER, SMARTER POWER GENERATION & CO2 RE-USE
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Further Information
JAPAN
Ronald Mitchell
Manager Business Development
Environmental & Chemical Plant Project Department
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd.
3-3-1 Minatomirai, Nishi-ku, Yokohama, 220-8401
Office Ph: +81-45-200-9131 | Cell Ph: +81-90-4420-3941
E-mail:
ronald_mitchell@mhi.co.jp
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