Module-Ii: Chemical Technology-V Sem
Module-Ii: Chemical Technology-V Sem
MODULE-II
MANUFACTURING OF ACIDS
&
FERTILIZERS
CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY-V SEM
CONTENTS
ACIDS
1. SULPHURIC ACID (DCDA PROCESS)
2. NITRIC ACID
3. PHOSPHORIC ACID (WET PROCESS)
FERTILIZERS
4. AMMONIA
5. UREA
6. SUPERPHOSPHATE (SSP, TSP)
7. AMMONIUM SULPHATE
PRODUCTION OF SULFURIC ACID (DCDA POCESS)
Chemical reactions
Process:
• Air drying tower with acid
• Sulfur is injected into burner
• Reaction Temperature 2000°F
• Exothermic reaction must be cooled
• Steam recovered
Kinetic Effects:
• Oxidation of sulfur dioxide is slow and reversible
• The reaction requires a catalyst and 426.7°C temperatures
▫ The reaction is exothermic and sensitive to excessive heat
• Equilibrium Constant (The degree at which the reaction proceeds is temp.
dependent)
Purification unit
• This includes the dusting tower, cooling pipes, washing tower, drying
tower, arsenic purifier and testing box. Sulfur dioxide has many impurities
such as vapours, dust particles and arsenous oxide. Therefore, it must be
purified to avoid catalyst poisoning . In this process, the gas is washed
with water, and dried by sulfuric acid. In the dusting tower, the sulfur
dioxide is exposed to a steam which removes the dust particles. After the
gas is cooled, the sulfur dioxide enters the washing tower where it is
sprayed by water to remove any soluble impurities.
• In the drying tower sulfuric acid is sprayed on the gas to remove the
moisture from it. Finally, arsenic oxide is removed when the gas is
exposed to ferric hydroxide.
Overall flow chart
Oxidation of Sulfur
1) S + O2 SO2
Sulfur
Steam
10-12% SO2
Water
Air
SO2 Gas
Contact Process:
-Vanadium pentoxide catalyst
Gas
- Exothermic Reaction Cooling
SO3 Gas
Oxidation of Sulfur Dioxide
Because of the large effect temperature plays on the reaction, multiple
catalyst layers are used, with cooling between each step.
Additionally, as the partial pressure of SO3 increases, further reaction is
limited.
This is overcome by removing the SO3 after the third stage to drive
the reaction to completion.
SO2 Gas SO2 Gas
Gas
Cooling
SO3 Gas
Gas
Cooling
SO3 Gas
510 C
75 C
430 C
200 C
• The next step to the Contact Process is DCDA or Double Contact Double
Absorption. In this process the product gases (SO2) and (SO3) are passed
through absorption towers twice to achieve further absorption and
conversion of SO2 to SO3 and production of higher grade sulfuric acid.
• SO2-rich gases enter the catalytic converter, usually a tower with multiple
catalyst beds, and are converted to SO3, achieving the first stage of
conversion. The exit gases from this stage contain both SO2 and SO3 which
are passed through intermediate absorption tower
• where sulfuric acid is trickled down packed columns and SO3 reacts with
water increasing the sulfuric acid concentration. Though SO2 too passes
through the tower it is unreactive and comes out of the absorption tower.
• This stream of gas containing SO2, after necessary cooling is passed
through the catalytic converter bed column again achieving up to 99.8%
conversion of SO2 to SO3 and the gases are again passed through the final
absorption column thus resulting not only achieving high conversion
efficiency for SO2 but also enabling production of higher concentration of
sulfuric acid.
• The industrial production of sulfuric acid involves proper control of
temperatures and flow rates of the gases as both the conversion
efficiency and absorption are dependent on these.
• Because of the large effect temperature plays on the reaction, multiple
catalyst layers are used, with cooling between each step.
• This is overcome by removing the SO3 after the third stage to drive the
reaction to completion.
Oleum Production
• By-products
• 57 to 64% of the energy input generates steam
• Steam energy is used to drive the turbine that supplies power to the main
air blower
• Additional steam remaining is tolled internally for other plant operations
• SO2/SO3 is vented in small amounts and is federally regulated.
• Heat Integration
• Steam is used to pre-heat and vapor from the absorption towers used to
cool
• Minimizes the cost of manufacturing to maximize the profit.
Production Considerations
Properties
Raw materials
Main reactions
1. Oxidation of NH3 to NO
NH3 + 5/4O2 NO + 3/4H2O ∆H= -54Kcal
2. Oxidation of NO to NO2
2NO + O2 2 NO2 ∆H= -27.2Kcal
3. Absorption of NO2 in water
2NO2 + H2O HNO3 + HNO2
4. Concentration of HNO3
Side reactions
NH3 + 3/4O2 1/2N2 + 3/2H2O ∆H =-75.7Kcal
NH3 1/2 N2 + 3/2H2
• Compressed air is mixed with anhydrous ammonia, fed to a shell and tube
converter designed so that the preheater and a steam heat recovery
boiler-superheater are within the same reactor shell.
• The converter section consists of 10-30 sheets of Pt-Rh alloy in the form of
60-80 mesh wire gauge packed in layers inside the tube.
• Gas passes downward with a velocity designed to give a contact time of
about 2.5 10 4 sec in the catalyst zone at 8000C.
• Product gases from the reactor, containing 10-12 % NO, are sent trough
heat recovery units, a quench unit for rapid cooling to remove a large
fraction of the product heat , and into the oxidizer- absorber system.
• Air is added to convert NO to NO2 at the more favourable low temperature
(40-500C) environment of the absorption system.
• The equipment in the absorption train may be a series of packed or sieve
tray vertical towers or a series of horizontal cascade absorbers.
• The product from the absorption system is 57-60 % HNO3 solution which can
be sold as is or with different concentrations.
• Concentrated of nitric acid to 95% can be done by one several methods,
1. Concentration by H2SO4
2. Concentration by Mg(NO3)2
• Advantages of Mg(NO3)2 process are:-
1. Operating costs about behalf of those encountered with H2SO4
concentration.
2. Capital requirements are only 70% as great.
3. Acid quality and yield is improved.
Platinum-Rhodium catalyst
Properties of platinum
Chemical properties
2. Platinum is unaffected by air and water but will dissolve in hot aqua regia,
• The wet process is according to the acids (sulfuric acid, nitric acid or
hydrochloric acid) used to decompose the phosphate rock.
• The process using sulfuric acid is the most common among all particularly
for producing fertilizer grade phosphoric acid.
• The wet process phosphoric acid, also called as green acid.
• Depending upon the hydrate forms of calcium sulfate produced during the
wet process, it is classified as anhydrate, hemi hydrate and dihydrate.
• The hydrate form is controlled mainly by temperature and acid
concentration.
Properties:
Phosphoric Acid:
• Molecular formula : H3PO4
• Molecular weight : 98 gm/mole
• Melting point : 42.4ºC
• Boiling point : 213ºC
Raw Materials:
• The only other raw material required is strong sulphuric acid which comes
from a contact sulphuric acid plant located at or near the phosphoric acid
plant.
Chemical Reaction:
• Anhydrate CaSO4
• Hemi hydrate CaSO4.1/2H2O
• Dihydrate CaSO4.2H2O
Quantitative requirements:
Basis:
• 1 ton of phosphoric acid (100%)
• Phosphate rock(32% P2O5) = 2.5 tons
• Sulfuric acid(93-98%) = 2 tons
Plant capacity:
• 100-150 tons/day of 100% H3PO4
Flow Sheet:
Process Description:
Process design:
• Fineness of grind
• Temperature
• Control of sulphuric acid
Material of construction:
• Reaction tank constructed of steel and lined with acid-proof brick.
• All air vent systems are PVC coated steel.
• Storage tanks of rubber-lined steel.
Uses:
The presence of water in vinegar has such a profound effect on acetic acid's
properties that for centuries chemists believed that glacial acetic acid and the
acid found in vinegar were two different substances.
MANUFACTURE
Raw material
Methanol 510 kg
Carbon monoxide 445 kg
Reaction
CH3OH + CO CH3COOH
FLOW DIAGRAM OF ACETIC ACID
PROCESS FLOW DIAGRAM OF ACETIC ACID
Manufacture process
o ACEO bio-acetic acid pilot plant in Burghausen has already been up and
running for the past six months and uses following processes. ACEO
Process - involves a biomass feedstock being converted to ethanol (using
yeast) and producing acetic acid via gas phase oxidation process
• Gaseous ammonia was first isolated by Joseph Priestley in 1774 and was
termed as "alkaline air".
• Claude Louis Berthollet ascertained its composition in 1785.
• The Haber-Bosch process to produce ammonia from the nitrogen in the air
was developed by Fritz Haber and Carl Bosch in 1909 and patented in
1910.
• Prior to the availability of cheap natural gas, hydrogen as a precursor to
ammonia production was produced via the electrolysis of water or using
the chloralkali process.
Ammonia
• The method was first developed by Haber and Bosch therefore known as
• Haber and Bosch Process.
• The manufacture of ammonia is carried out by passing mixture of pure
• hydrogen and nitrogen in the proportion of 3:1 by volume under pressure
• (100-1000atm depending on conversion required).
• Both the gases are sent through filter to remove compression oil and
• additionally through the high temperature guard converter in which CO and
• CO2 are converted to CH4, and also removal of traces of H2O, H2S, P and As.
• The relatively cool gas is added along the outside of converter tube walls to
• provide cooling.
• Carbon steel is used as material of construction for pressure vessel and
internal tubes.
• The preheated gas flows next through the inside of the tube which
contains promoted iron catalyst at 500-5500C.
• The NH3 product, with 8-30 % conversion depending on a process
conditions, is removed by condensation, first with water cooling and then
NH3 refrigeration.
• The unconverted N2-H2 mixture is recirculated to allow an 85-90 % yield.
• Cost is greatly influenced by the pressure, temperature, catalyst, purity
of raw materials and most importantly heat recovery and reuse.
• For achieving quality material at lower cost modification in Haber and
Bosch Process are initiated.
Reaction
The synthesis gas is cooled slightly to 735oC. It then flows to the secondary
reformer where it is mixed with a calculated amount of air. The highly
exothermic reaction between oxygen and methane produces more hydrogen.
Important reactions are:
CO + H2O → CO2 + H2
O2 + 2CH4 → 2CO + 4H2
O2 + CH4 → CO2 + 2H2
2O2 + CH4 → 2H2O + CO2
In addition, the necessary nitrogen is added in the secondary reformer. As
the catalyst that is used to form the ammonia is pure iron, water, carbon
dioxide and carbon monoxide must be removed from the gas stream to
prevent oxidation of the iron. This is carried out in the next three steps.
Uses
1) Urea has the highest nitrogen content available in a solid fertilizer (46%). It is
easy to produce as prills or granules and easily transported in bulk or bags
with no explosive hazard.
2) It dissolves readily in water. It leaves no salt residue after use on crops and
can often be used for foliar feeding.
3) Urea is an acceptable fertilizer for rice and preferable to nitrates for flooded
rice because of the reduction of nitrates to N2O and/or nitrogen (in anaerobic
conditions) which is lost to the atmosphere.
4) Also, rice can utilize the ammonium form of nitrogen efficiently.
5) Hydrolysis and nitrification (in aerobic conditions) are rapid in tropical, sub-
tropical and warm climates, Urea can be sprayed on leaves and can also be
mixed with insecticides or herbicides for soil application.
6) A urea ammonium nitrate mixture with herbicide is also used for weed
control.
Disadvantages
1) When applied to a bare soil surface, urea hydrolyzes rapidly result into
loss of significant quantity of ammonia by volatilization. Such losses vary
from soil to soil and are greater for urea in a pellet form rather than in
solution form.
2) It is phytotoxic due to rapid hydrolysis of urea in soils can cause injury to
the seedlings by ammonia.
3) The fertilizer grade urea may contain toxic biuret which is formed during
urea manufacture by an excessive temperature rise. Above 2%
concentration of biuret in urea is harmful to plants.
Feed grade urea is sometimes referred to by the number 262 which is the
product of its nitrogen content (42 %) multiplied by 6.25, the latter being the
factor used by chemists to convert nitrogen to its protein equivalent.
Properties
Reaction
A B C D
Now a day, granular urea has gained importance since it minimize air
pollution and granules has higher strength larger sizes and is more
compatible with other granular fertilizers.
Autoclave variables
The objective of autoclave reaction is to produce the optimum economic
yield. The conditions which affects rate of reactions are temperature,
pressure, NH3/CO2 ratio and feed rate. The urea production rate can be
varied as follows
Increase with increasing pressure
Increase with temperature to maximum at 175-1800C, then falls of sharply.
The operating pressure should be above the dissociation pressure
(dissociation pressure is 180 atm at 190°C) for the carbamate.
Use no excess ammonia.
Reasons for not operating at maximum temperature and pressure without
excess ammonia
Increased pressure increases capital and operating cost of compression
and reaction equipment.
At higher temperature urea decomposed to biuret, which is
detrimental to germinating seeds and toxic to animals.
The above process conditions enhance corrosion rates to machinery
Carbamate decomposition and recycle
It is optimized by short residence times in a stripping column operating at
low pressure and high temperature.
Later should be below 1100C if hold up time exceeds 1-2 seconds to avoid
biuret formation.
Use of millisecond contact time in a flash evaporator allows 1400C
operating temperatures in the high recycle design.
Main difference in competing processes is in the recycle design.
Since conversion is only 40-50 % per pass, the unreacted off gases must be
recirculated or used economically elsewhere.
Recompression of off gases is virtually impossible because of corrosion
and formation of solid carbamate in compressors.
A solution is formed and pumped into the autoclave.
Production of granular urea (Prilling)
Problem again is biuret formation. Vacuum drying of 80% urea to > 99% and
spraying to air cooled and solidify must be done just above the melting
point of urea and with a minimum residence time.
Heat dissipation in the autoclave
The exothermic heat of reaction can be removed by coils, wall cooling, or
by adding excess reactant to provide sensible heat pick up.
Corrosion
It can be minimized by use of the corrosion resistant metals and maintaining
the proper reaction conditions. High cost silver or tantalum liners are used
in the autoclaves with titanium, stainless (321SS) and aluminum alloys used
in other parts of the plant. Minimum temperature and pressure with excess
NH3 are desirable to reduce the severe corrosion rates.
Uses
As a fertilizer.
As a protein food supplements for ruminant.
As an ingredient in the manufacture of resins, plastics, adhesive, coatings.
Textiles anti-shrink agents and ion exchange resins.
In melamine production.
It is an intermediate in the manufacture of ammonium sulfamate,
sulfamic acid and pthalocyanines.
PRODUCTION OF SUPERPHOSPHATE
General Information
Overall reaction
Although newer plants use continuous processes, some plants still conduct
these operations stepwise. All plants first pulverize the rock with modern
pulverizing and air-separation equipment, most rock is ground so that 70 to
80% of particles are passed through 200mesh screen.
2. Continuous-den process
Finely ground phosphate rock is fed by a weigh feeder into a double-
conical mixer, where it is thoroughly mixed with metered quantities of
sulfuric acid.
The acid and water are fed into the cone mixer tangentially to provide the
necessary mixing with the phosphate rock.
The sulfuric acid is dilute with water in the cone to the concentration of
51°Be.
The heat of dilution of the sulfuric acid serves to maintain proper reaction
temperature, and excess heat is dissipated by evaporation of extra water
added.
The rate of water addition and acid concentration may be varied to control
product moisture.
The fresh superphosphate is discharged from the cone mixer into a pug
mill, where additional mixing takes place and the reaction starts.
From the pug mill the superphosphate drops onto the den conveyor, which
has a very low travel speed to allow about 1hr for solidifying before reaching
the cutter.
The cutter slices the solid mass of crude product so that it may be
conveyed to pile storage for "currying" or completion of the chemical
reaction, which takes 10-20 day to reach P2O5 availability acceptable for
plant food.
The conveyers den is enclosed so that fumes do not escape into the
working area.
These fumes are scrubbed will water sprays to remove acid and fluoride
before being exhausted to the atmosphere.
Scrubber water is neutralized by passing through the limestone bed.
Nitric and mixed acid acidulation of phosphate rock
First use of nitric and mixed acid acidulation of phosphate rock was
carried out in Europe.
It is desirable, since nitrogen has an essential value as plant food and can
be resold at its purchase price.
Also, this saves sulfur.
Simple acidulation of phosphate rock with nitric acid produces the
hydroscopic superphosphate, since it contains calcium nitrate.
There are various commercial modification in the process is carried out.
In one, the phosphate rock is extracted by mixed nitric and sulfuric acids,
followed by ammonization, drying.
In another method, mixed nitric and phosphoric acidulation followed by
the conventional steps and others use nitric acid alone for acidulation.
These processes, as well as conditioning against moisture absorption as
practiced for ammonium nitrate, have led to an extension of this
acidulation with nitric acid.
Nitrophosphate is also gaining importance particularly in European
countries.
Phosphate rock is decomposed with nitric acid plus small amount of
phosphoric acid.
The resulting slurry is ammoniated and carbonated and, if desired,
combined with potassium salts and spray-dried to yield a uniform palletized
product.
Granulation
Both granulation and drying of the SSP are carried out in the same piece of
equipment.
The powdered superphosphate enters to rotary drum granulator, where it is mixed
and granulated with recycled fines (recycle ratio: > 0.6).
Granulation is controlled by adjusting the water content and temperature of the
product in the 1st part of the rotary drum.
Drying is achieved near the exit from the granulator and involves adding more
sulfuric acid and ground limestone (about 60 kg/ton SSP).
The heat produced by the reaction dries the product and the calcium sulfate formed
encapsulates the product in such a way that caking is avoided during final curing and
storage of the product.
No P2O5 reversion is noticed.
Product is sized using a conventional system of screens and crushers such that 90 %
of the product is between 1 and 4 mm in size.
Final curing of the product occurs during storage for less than two weeks.
Handling and storage
Powder SSP is not free flowing and has the tendency to cake.
Granulated SSP can be easily handled and uniformly distributed in the
field without any problem.
Due to the presence of free acid, single superphosphate is normally
bagged in polyethylene lined HDPE woven bags.
Polypropylene woven bags can also be used.
Cost
The costs of bagging, transportation and storage of SSP are high, because
the mass of SSP required is more than twice that for TSP.
Hence small plants of SSP are economically better suited to serve small
local markets.
Uses
Disadvantages of TSP