Fuel processing of feedstocks having components harmful to hydrodesulfurization
09745526 · 2017-08-29
Assignee
Inventors
- Antonio M. Vincitore (South Windsor, CT, US)
- Peter F. Foley (Manchester, CT, US)
- Derek W. Hildreth (Temecula, CA, US)
- John L. PRESTON (Hebron, CT, US)
- Stephen G. Pixton (South Windsor, CT, US)
- James A. Davies (Glastonbury, CT, US)
Cpc classification
C10G45/02
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01B3/48
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01B2203/0233
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C10G3/50
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C10G45/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01B2203/065
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y10T137/0318
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
C01B2203/0283
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
B01J8/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C10G45/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C10G45/02
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01B3/48
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C10L3/10
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A reformer system (11) having a hydrodesulfurizer (12) provides desulfurized natural gas feedstock to a catalytic steam reformer (16), the outflow of which is treated by a water gas shift reactor (20) and optionally a preferential CO oxidizer (58) to provide reformate gas (28, 28a) having high hydrogen and moderate carbon dioxide content. To avoid damage to the hydrodesulfurizer from overheating, any deleterious hydrogen reactants, such as the oxygen in peak shave gas or olefins, in the non-desulfurized natural gas feedstock (35) are reacted (38) with hydrogen (28, 28a; 71) to convert them to alkanes (e.g., ethylene and propylene to ethane and propane) and to convert oxygen to water in a catalytic reactor (38) having no sulfide sorbent, and cooled (46), below a temperature which would damage the reactor, by evaporative cooling with pressurized hot water (42). Hydrogen for the desulfurizer and the hydrogen reactions may be provided as recycle reformate (28, 28a) or from a mini-CPO (67), or from other sources.
Claims
1. An apparatus, comprising: a hydrogenator devoid of sulfide absorbent, connected to a source of hydrogen-containing gas and to a source of hydrocarbon feedstock and configured to catalytically react a substantial portion of any olefins or oxygen in the feedstock to alkanes or water, respectively, wherein the hydrogenator comprises a dual coil heat exchanger having catalyst disposed on surfaces of a primary coil and having a secondary coil with flowing water at pressure to evaporate within a predetermined temperature range; and a hydrodesulfurizer having a catalyst/absorber bed, which may have or may not have a feedstock heater upstream of the catalyst/absorber bed, the hydrodesulfurizer inlet connected to the outlet of the hydrogenator, either through a heat exchanger or directly, to continuously receive feedstock from the source of feedstock, through the hydrogenator, whether or not the feedstock entering the hydrogenator contains olefins or oxygen.
2. The apparatus according to claim 1, comprising: a temperature sensor for sensing the temperature within the hydrogenator; the source of hydrogen containing gas includes controllable valving; and a controller responsive to the temperature sensor to cause the controllable valving to provide, within the predetermined range of temperatures, only sufficient hydrogen to convert a predetermined amount of sulfur, and to cause the controllable valving to provide, at temperatures above the predetermined temperature range, additional hydrogen in relation to the temperature.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
MODE(S) OF IMPLEMENTATION
(4) Referring to
(5) From the reformer 16, a process gas containing a high percentage of hydrogen, as well as some carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide, is fed over a conduit 19 to a conventional water gas shift reactor 20 that converts a substantial amount of CO and water into CO.sub.2 and hydrogen.
(6) The result is reformate gas in a conduit 28 which contains a high percentage of hydrogen, some CO.sub.2 and other gases, possibly including unreformed hydrocarbons. The hydrogen-containing reformate gas is fed by a conduit 29 through an orifice 30 to provide an adequate flow of hydrogen for desulfurization, when reaction of deleterious hydrogen reactants is not required, and to provide additional hydrogen through a valve 31 when reaction of deleterious hydrogen reactants, such as olefins or oxygen, is required.
(7) The hydrogen and natural gas raw feedstock in a conduit 35 are provided to an inlet 36 of a water cooled catalytic reactor 38, which may comprise a dual coil heat exchanger having catalysts disposed on the surfaces of a primary coil 39, with high pressure hot water in lines 42 from a source 43 circulating through a secondary coil 40. In accordance with the invention, the catalytic reactor 38 can be considered a passive device in terms of controlling operating temperature. Coolant flow from the source 43 is set to control the reactor temperature within an acceptable range given any possible deleterious hydrogen reactant content in the natural gas raw feedstock. A controller 46 adjusts H.sub.2 flow through the valve 31 in response to variations in reactor temperature, within the aforementioned range of temperature, as indicated by a temperature sensor 47. As the reactor temperature increases, the H.sub.2 flow is increased according to a predetermined schedule, to provide enough H.sub.2 to the catalytic reactor to assure conversion of all the olefins or oxygen, while minimizing the H.sub.2 flow when olefin or oxygen content is low or zero.
(8) The temperature of the pressurized hot water from the source may be greater than 180 C (325 F), but is in the liquid phase because of being at a pressure on the order of 1030 kPa (150 psi). When the reaction of a deleterious hydrogen reactant with hydrogen raises the temperature above about 180 C (356 F), the hot water will boil, producing steam, which is endothermic and keeps the temperature from rising above the vaporization temperature at the pressure of the hot water. This also provides passive control on the temperature within the cooled catalytic reactor 38, so that the catalyst is not harmed and there is no danger to the structural integrity of the vessel.
(9) Maintaining catalyst temperature is a critical function of the water cooled reactor design. Virgin reactor catalyst and in-service catalysts that have been subjected only to short term exposure to a feedstock bearing no deleterious hydrogen reactants but containing catalyst poisons, such as sulfur, will initiate the hydrogenation reaction upon exposure to feedstock bearing olefins or peak shave gas at temperatures less than room temperature (21 C, 70 F). However, some reactor catalysts containing noble metals, when subjected to long term exposure to feedstock bearing no deleterious hydrogen reactants but containing poisons, require an elevated temperature to initiate the hydrogen reaction upon re-introduction of feedstock containing deleterious hydrogen reactants and poisons. This minimum temperature is defined herein as the light off temperature.
(10) The light-off temperature is functionally dependent on the inlet gas conditions and the inherent physical/chemical properties of the catalyst. The cooled reactor 38 is designed to maintain the catalyst above the light off temperature required by the selected catalyst to initiate the hydrogen reaction after long term exposure to feedstocks bearing no olefins or peak shave gas but containing poisons, such as sulfur, which may inhibit the reaction at room temperature. The light off temperature should be about 100 C (212 F).
(11) A second critical function of the cooled reactor design is to limit the maximum temperature within the catalyst bed to prevent catalyst damage or deactivation and to limit the thermodynamic equilibrium olefin slip to acceptable levels. The cooled reactor design for the exemplary embodiment maintains the catalyst temperature between 100 C (212 F) and 310 C (590) by using cooling water at an inlet temperature between 150 C (302 F) and 210 C (410 F).
(12) Another critical design feature of the cooled reactor is that it reduces the deleterious hydrogen reactant content of the feedstock to a level which is consistent with the maximum limits for the down stream equipment. The cooling capacity of the cooled reactor 38 must be sized to absorb the heat release associated with at least this minimum deleterious hydrogen reactant conversion. Typically, the maximum limit for the down stream equipment is set by both the inlet feedstock gas temperature to the HDS, and the maximum HDS catalyst bed temperature limit. Typically, the minimum required deleterious hydrogen reactant conversion is 80%, and the cooled reactor is sized to convert 100% of the deleterious hydrogen reactant and to absorb all of the heat release associated with that conversion level, with the coolant temperature proper at all expected operating conditions.
(13) The outflow from the cooled reactor 38 in a conduit 50 may exceed the desired inlet temperature of downstream equipment. In the disclosed embodiment, the hydrodesulfurizer 12 is one which has been designed to be connected directly to the feedstock source (the natural gas pipeline), without any preprocessing. If therefore has a heater section which precedes the catalyst/absorber bed, to raise the feedstock from the nominal temperature of the natural gas source, about 21 C (70 F), to between about 260 C (500 F) and about 340 C (650 F). The heater section inlet temperature is therefore cooled to be about the nominal temperature of the natural gas source.
(14) In the exemplary embodiment, the exit temperature of the reactor 38 may be in excess of 215 C (419 F), which exceeds the desired inlet temperature of the hydrodesulfurizer 12. A heat exchanger 52 is employed in the disclosed embodiment of the design to reduce the temperature of the deleterious hydrogen reactant-depleted feedstock to about 100 C (212 F). The heat exchanger may comprise an air cooled radiator in most cases, but if necessary, can comprise a heat exchanger cooled by a liquid coolant in a conduit 55. In other embodiments, a hydrodesulfurizer without a heater section, or with a less robust heater section, may avoid the need for the heat exchanger 52. These and other details are selected as may be suitable for any given implementation of the present modality.
(15) The hydrogenator has no sulfide absorbent and therefor does not remove any sulfur from the gas stream, even though a small amount of sulfur may be converted to hydrogen sulfide in the hydrogenator.
(16) A number of other variations may be made in the details of implementation, when incorporating the modality into a system. For instance, instead of the orifice 30, conduit sizing may be used to provide a reduced flow of H.sub.2 when reaction of deleterious hydrogen reactants is not required. In place of the orifice 30, another valve, controllable by the controller 46, may be employed. Or, both functions may be performed by appropriate control of a single valve 31, without the orifice 30.
(17) As shown in
(18) Another embodiment of the invention, illustrated in
(19) The term “non-deleterious” means having the deleterious hydrogen reactants reduced sufficiently so as to not cause excessive temperatures in the hydrodesulfurizer as a result of reactions therewith, which typically requires conversion of at least about 80% of the deleterious hydrogen reactants to alkanes or water, for instance.
(20) The natural gas feedstock in conduit 35 is allowed to flow through the reactor 38 at all times (even when not needed to convert deleterious hydrogen reactants) for mechanical and control simplicity, and to support quicker response to excessive temperatures. The amount of hydrogen is varied for beneficial removal of deleterious hydrogen reactants in accordance with a pre-determined operating temperature range within the catalyst bed of the reactor 38. In this embodiment, the operating temperature range of the reactor 38 is set at 149 C (300 F) to 177 C (350 F).
(21) Since changes and variations of the disclosed embodiments may be made without departing from the concept's intent, it is not intended to limit the disclosure other than as required by the appended claims.