High strength shaped aluminas and a method of producing such high strength shaped aluminas
11091396 · 2021-08-17
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C01P2004/61
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B2235/96
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B2235/549
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C30B15/10
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B2235/3218
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B2235/95
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B2235/5436
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01P2002/60
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B2235/72
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B35/1115
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01J2/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C09K8/80
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C04B35/626
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B35/63
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C30B35/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01F7/02
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A method of producing high strength shaped alumina by feeding alumina power into an agglomerator having a shaft with mixers able to displace the alumina power along the shaft, spraying a liquid binder onto the alumina power as it is displaced along the shaft to form a shaped alumina, and calcining the shaped alumina. The shaped alumina produced having a loose bulk density of greater than or equal to 1.20 g/ml, a surface area less than 10 m.sup.2/g, impurities of less than 5 ppm of individual metals and less than 9 ppm of impurities in total, and/or crush strength of greater than 12,000 psi.
Claims
1. A method of producing a shaped alumina comprising: i) providing an alumina powder, wherein the alumina powder includes a) as a first option an alumina powder having a crystallite size of 35 Å to 190 Å and a particle size D.sub.50 value of greater than or equal to 40 micron, which is milled to an average particle size D.sub.50 value of less than 40 microns; b) as a second option a combination of an alumina powder having a crystallite size of 35 Å to 190 Å and a particle size D.sub.50 value of greater than or equal to 40 micron, which is milled to an average particle size D.sub.50 value of less than 40 microns, and an alumina powder having a crystallite size of between 300 Å to 500 Å ii) feeding the alumina powder into an agglomerator, the agglomerator including a shaft with mixers able to displace the alumina powder along a length of the shaft iii) spraying a liquid binder onto the alumina powder as it is displaced along the length of the shaft of the agglomerator to form a shaped alumina, and iv) calcining the shaped alumina.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the alumina powder comprises an aluminum oxide hydroxide (AlOOH), a boehmite, or a pseudoboehmite.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the alumina powder having a crystallite size of 35 Å to 190 Å and a particle size D.sub.50 value of greater than or equal to 40 micron is milled to an average particle size D.sub.50 value of 30 microns.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the alumina powder having a crystallite size of 35 Å to 190 Å and a particle size D.sub.50 value of greater than or equal to 40 micron is milled to an average particle size D.sub.50 value of 10 microns or smaller.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the alumina powder comprises an acid incorporated into the alumina powder as part of an alumina production process.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein the liquid binder comprises water.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the liquid binder comprises water and an acid.
8. The method of claim 1 wherein the ratio of alumina powder to liquid binder is from 1.5:1 to 15:1 on a weight basis.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the ratio of alumina powder to liquid binder is from 1.8:1 to 10:1.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the calcination temperature is from 1250° C. to 1700° C. and the calcination is carried out for a period of 1 hour to 40 hours.
11. A shaped alumina produced according to the method of claim 1, and having all of the following properties: i) a loose bulk density of greater than or equal to 1.20 g/ml, ii) a surface area less than 10 m.sup.2/g, iii) impurities of less than 5 ppm of any individual metal and less than 9 ppm in total; and iv) crush strength of greater than 12 000 psi.
12. A shaped alumina comprising all of the following properties: i) a loose bulk density of greater than or equal to 1.20 g/ml, ii) a surface area less than 10 m.sup.2/g, iii) impurities of less than 5 ppm of any individual metal and less than 9 ppm in total; and iv) crush strength of greater than 12 000 psi.
13. A shaped alumina comprising i) a loose bulk density of greater than or equal to 1.20 g/ml; ii) impurities of less than 5 ppm of any individual metal and less than 9 ppm in total; and at least one of the following properties: iii) a surface area less than 10 m.sup.2/g; and iv) crush strength of greater than 12 000 psi.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The Invention will now be described with reference to the following figures and non-limiting experiments.
(2) In the Figures;
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(16) The invention describes a method to produce high strength shaped alumina by feeding alumina powder into an agglomerator having a central shaft, spraying liquid binder onto the alumina powder as it is displaced along a length of the shaft of the agglomerator to form shaped alumina. The alumina can be in the form of agglomerates, beads, spherical particles, or combinations thereof. The shaped alumina is then calcined.
(17) An example of the method (8) of the invention is included in
(18) The alumina powder comprises aluminum oxide hydroxide, a boehmite, or a pseudoboehmite, but is preferably a boehmite. The alumina powder may as a first option have a crystallite size of 35 Å to 190 Å and a particle size D.sub.50 value of greater than or equal to 40 microns. In such a case the alumina powder may or may not include an acid in the alumina powder. Such alumina powder is to be milled before being fed into the pin mixer to an average particle size D.sub.50 value of less than 40 microns, preferably 30 microns and more preferably 10 microns or smaller.
(19) As a second option the alumina powder may have a crystallite size of 300 Å to 500 Å, preferably 325 Å to 450 Å. Such alumina has an average particle size D.sub.50 value of 40 microns and may include an in situ acid in the alumina powder.
(20) The invention provides for a third option, including a combination of i) milling the alumina powder having a crystallite size of between 35 Å and 190 Å and a particle size D.sub.50 value of greater than or equal to 40 microns to an average particle size D.sub.50 value of less than 40 microns, preferably an average particle size D.sub.50 value of 30 microns and more preferably an average particle size D.sub.50 value of 10 microns or smaller and ii) selecting a suitable alumina powder having a crystallite size of 300 Å to 500 Å, preferably between 325 Å and 450 Å that does not need to be milled. In short, the third option is a combination of the first and second options.
(21) A liquid binder is sprayed onto the alumina powder(s) just after the powder(s) enters the pin mixer (14). The liquid binder may either be water or a combination of water and acid(s) depending on what alumina powder is chosen for the method of the invention. The acids preferably are monovalent acids. These monovalent acids may include nitric acid, formic acid, acetic acid or mixtures thereof. Carboxylic acids with single or multiple acid sites may also be used. Acids such as lactic and tartaric are examples of these types of acids.
(22) The acid in the liquid binder acts to partially disperse some of the alumina powder. The combination of water and acid(s) acting on the alumina creates a binder for the alumina. In the case of alumina containing an acid, water only may be used as the liquid binder since the acid function is already supplied in the powder feed. However, the invention does not preclude adding additional acid if required. The acid added may be 5 wt %, preferably 4% or less of the liquid binder.
(23) Under high shear action of the mixers (20) i.e. the rotating pins or paddles in the pin mixer (14), the liquid binder is dispersed into the alumina powder. As the liquid binder mixes into the alumina powder, the alumina powder becomes partially dispersed making it adhesive and pliable. The energy from the mixers (20) first breaks up the alumina powder and then forms it into shaped alumina including beads or spherical shapes through agglomeration. Beads are smoothed and rounded by the rotating action within the chamber. Moist shaped alumina in the form of beads, agglomerates, spherical particles, or mixtures thereof are formed and exit the mixer. The beads can be sized by screening to obtain a product with a narrower particle distribution. These beads can be calcined at a calcination temperature of between 1250° C. and 1700° C., preferably 1250° C. to 1600° C., most preferably 1250° C. to below 1500° C. for a period of 1 to 40 hours, preferably at least 6 hours, without further drying. The drying step as required by the prior art is no longer required if the method of the present invention is applied.
(24)
(25) The pin mixer (14) shown in
EXAMPLES
(26) In the examples that follow:
(27) Formic acid or nitric acid is used as an acid in the liquid binder.
(28) An alumina powder to liquid binder ratio of 10:1 to 13:1 is used.
(29) Shaped alumina in the form of beads in the size range of 100 microns to 2 mm in diameter can be made using appropriate powder feed rates and rotor speeds in the agglomerator.
(30) The strength of the beads was measured by crush testing individual beads on a Mecmesin MultiTest 2.5i test stand between parallel plates. At least 25 beads were tested and the results averaged. The force required to crush each single bead was measured as was the diameter of the bead being tested. Crush strength of each bead was calculated as the crush force divided by the cross sectional area of the bead. The strength and diameter values were averaged for the sample of beads. Results are in psi and plotted against the mean diameter of the beads.
(31) Properties of the various powders used in the Examples and shown in the Figures are summarized in Table I. Milled Catapal B alumina refers to either of the two particle sizes created from the base alumina.
(32) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE I Properties of Alumina Powders Used in the Examples Average Powder Crystallite Size, Particle Size, Powder 021 Plane, Å microns Catapal ® B alumina 47 40 Milled Catapal ® B alumina 47 30 Milled Catapal ® B alumina 47 10 Catapal ® C1 alumina 58 40 Catapal ® D alumina 77 40 Milled Catapal ® D alumina 77 10 Dispal ® 15N4 alumina 186 40 Catapal ® 200 alumina 400 40
Example 1
(33) Alumina powder, Catapal® B alumina, with a crystallite size of 47 Å on the 021 plane and a particle size D.sub.50 value of 40 microns was used. The alumina was milled by jet milling to an average particle size D.sub.50 value of 30 microns. Formic acid diluted to 4% or lower concentration and water made up the liquid binder. The alumina powder and liquid binder were run through the pin mixer and the beads that were produced were subsequently screened to size and calcined at 1450° C. for 10 hours to convert them to alpha alumina agglomerates/beads.
Example 2
(34) The same process as per Example 1 was used except that the starting Catapal® B alumina powder particle size was milled as per the invention, by jet milling the alumina powder to an average particle size D.sub.50 value of 10 microns.
Example 3
(35) The same process as per Example 1 was followed except Catapal® 200 alumina with a crystallite size of 400 Å was used. Because Catapal® 200 has a crystallite size of 400 Å, it was not milled. Catapal® 200 alumina has formic acid incorporated into it, so this in situ formic acid was supplied as part of the powder feed. The liquid binder was water alone. The powder particle size D.sub.50 value was 40 microns.
Example 4
(36) Milled Catapal B was blended at 25% ratio with Catapal® 200. The milled Catapal B had a particle size of 4 microns. Beads were processed with no acid. The liquid binder was a blend of water and 1% formic acid.
Comparative Example 1
(37) Alumina powder, unmilled Catapal® B alumina, with a crystallite size of 47 Å on the 021 plane and a particle size D.sub.50 value of 40 microns was used. Formic acid diluted to 4% or lower concentration and water made up the liquid binder. The alumina powder and liquid binder were run through the pin mixer and the beads that were produced were subsequently screened to size and calcined at 1450° C. for 10 hours to convert them to alpha alumina agglomerates/beads.
Comparative Example 2
(38) The same process as per Comparative Example 1 was used except the beads were calcined at 1600° C. for 10 hours.
Comparative Example 3
(39) Alumina powder, unmilled Catapal® B alumina, with a crystallite size of 47 Å on the 021 plane and a particle size D.sub.50 value of 40 microns was used. The liquid binder was nitric acid diluted to 2.5% or lower concentration and water. The alumina powder and liquid binder were run through the pin mixer and the beads that were produced were subsequently screened to size and calcined at 1600° C. for 10 hours to convert them to alpha alumina agglomerates/beads.
Comparative Example 4
(40) The same process as per Example 1 was used except that the starting alumina was unmilled Dispal® 15N4 alumina (186 Å). This product has nitric acid incorporated into the alumina during its production. In this example, only water was used as the liquid binder as the acid was in the alumina powder. The powder particle size D.sub.50 value was 40 microns.
Comparative Example 5
(41) The same process as per Example 1 was followed except Catapal® D alumina with a crystallite size of 77 Å was substituted for Catapal® B alumina. The powder particle size D.sub.50 value was 40 microns.
(42)
(43) In
(44) When the Catapal® B was milled to an average particle size D.sub.50 value of 30 microns (Example 1), the strength increased compared to the unmilled powder beads (Comparative Example 1) as shown in
(45) The data for Comparative Example 4, using Dispal® 15N4 alumina with water as a binder, shows strength similar to the unmilled Catapal B alumina (Comparative Example 1) at the same calcining temperature of 1450° C. This shows that increasing the starting alumina crystallite size (Dispal 15N4, 186 Å) compared to Catapal® B (47 Å) does not provide a strength advantage in this instance.
(46) It is clear from
(47) To show the advantages of the invention,
(48) As the powder size decreases, the graph clearly shows the strength significantly increases. The strength increase is not dependent upon the size of the agglomerated bead but rather on the particle size D.sub.50 value or diameter of the alumina powder fed into the pin mixer. Strength of all the bead sizes increases proportionately to the reduction in diameter of the feed powder.
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(50)
(51) Using the particle size D.sub.50 value 40 micron alumina powder, efforts were made to increase the LBD by manipulating the operating variables of the pin mixer (powder to liquid ratio, feed rate and rotor speed) with some success. However, milling the powder gave immediate increases in LBD above what could be accomplished with unmilled powders. The effect was similar for powders with different crystallite sizes as shown by the Catapal® B powder (47 Å) and Catapal® D powder (77 Å).
(52) An important advantage of the present invention is that there is an increase in LBD without the necessity of seeding the alumina with small alpha alumina particles to enhance sintering and densification. Seeding is an additional step that is difficult to perform. It requires intensive mixing of the seed and powder to ensure homogeneous distribution of the seed particles. The seeds must be produced to the correct size and quantity to get seeding effects and then mixed into the bulk powder. Seeding is a well-known process but difficult to perform effectively.
(53) Further, by using a boehmite alumina with a crystallite size substantially larger than the first option of 35 Å to 190 Å i.e. as per the second option, in the range of 300 Å to 500 Å, very high crush strength can be achieved without having to calcine the beads at extraordinarily high temperatures.
(54)
(55) In
(56) To make the process of the invention more economical, the following may be employed: i) milling one of the smaller crystallite size aluminas, in the range of 35 Å to 190 Å, to a smaller particle size D.sub.50 value, or ii) using a large crystallite size alumina such as Catapal® 200, an alumina powder having a crystallite size of 300 Å to 500 Å, or iii) a combination of i) and ii). These options produce an alumina bead having up to double the strength compared to beads made from unmilled small crystallite size boehmite (having a crystallite size between 35 Å and 190 Å). This strength can be achieved when the temperature of 1450° C. is used. The strength can be altered to the desired level by changing the calcining temperature in a range that is accessible with readily available commercial equipment.
(57) As
(58) Being able to achieve high strength by selecting different combinations of powder particle size and final calcining temperature is advantageous for adjusting other properties of the beads such as loose bulk density, porosity or adsorption capacity, pore diameter, and surface area. Examples of these will be shown as per
(59) Because strength can be maintained over a wide range of calcining conditions, the physical properties of the beads can be altered as needed for each application. For example in
(60) By either milling the alumina, or selecting a suitable crystallite size, or both, desired intrinsic properties of the beads can be adjusted using the calcining temperature. Strength of the beads will be maintained during this process.
(61) For catalysts and chemical carriers this is important so that the porosity and adsorption capacity can be achieved with beads that are sufficiently strong for their application.
(62) Loose Bulk Density (LBD) is important for crucible fill in the synthetic sapphire industry. High bulk density is desired to maximize the fill weight in an individual crucible. This maximizes the production from a single crucible cycle and lowers costs.
(63)
(64)
Comparative Example 6
(65) Comparison of the alumina data with commercial proppants used for oil well fracturing operations is shown in
(66) When the same powder is milled to a particle size D.sub.50 value of 10 micron the crush strength is significantly improved and now is equivalent to the highest strength commercial proppants. And, calcining to 1450° C. is sufficient to achieve this strength. A similar result is seen when milling the larger crystallite size Catapal® D alumina. By modifying the starting diameter of the boehmite powder, strengths matching different proppant types can be obtained using a single raw material. This is advantageous when producing chemical delivery beads for oil field applications. The chemical delivery bead strength should match the strength of the proppant used in the well fracturing operation so that the chemical delivery beads are not degraded under the fracture stress in the well.
(67) Also shown in
(68) By using the method of the present invention, different feed stocks having different crystallite sizes and particle sizes D.sub.50 value can be used. Further, by either milling the feedstock, using a feedstock with a higher crystallite size or both, the process provides for varying conditions of calcination, for example calcination conditions which remain within cost effective limits for commercial equipment. When the calcining temperature is increased to those used normally for commercial proppants, the strengths of these beads exceed the values of most commercial proppants. Again what is extremely important to note is that a further seeding step and a drying step is not required for the method of this invention which again is a technical and commercial advantage. Advantages also include the fact that a continuous process can be applied and the fact that simple water can be used as a binder in specific circumstances.
(69) Alumina Product:
(70) Purity of the alumina is a critical issue for sapphire production. Table II shows metals impurity analyses for a) the starting alumina powder, b) the uncalcined beads made by jet milling high purity boehmite and forming in the high shear agglomerator, and c) the beads after calcination. It can be seen that no or very low contamination of the product occurred through the process of the present invention. This low level of potential contamination makes the bead forming method suitable for production of high bulk density crucible fill for synthetic sapphire production processes.
(71) The single forming step does not introduce metallic impurities into the alumina. Combined with the high bulk density that is easily obtained, the product is useful for making synthetic sapphire by crucible melting processes.
(72) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE II Purity of Beads Formed with High Shear Agglomeration Total Description Ca Cr Cu Fe Ga K Mn Na Ni Si Ti Zn Zr Impurities Ultra High Purity 2 ND ND 0.7 ND ND <0.2 ND ND 1 <0.2 ND ND <4.1 Alumina before running through the pin mixer Ultra High Purity <0.2 ND ND 1.4 ND ND <0.2 1 ND 1 0.4 ND ND <4.2 Alumina after running through the pin mixer but before calcination Ultra High Purity 0.3 ND ND 1 ND 2 0.4 1 ND 2 <0.2 ND ND <6.8 Alumina after calcination ND stands for non-detectable Ultra High Purity Alumina = Pural ® for example
(73) Porosity of the beads can be controlled by controlling variables in both the feed and processing steps. Final pore volume is adjusted by feed selection based upon the particle size, the agglomeration conditions, and the calcining temperature. Various combinations of these can be used singly or in concert to achieve the desired final porosity of the beads.
(74) Some typical properties of the formed beads are given in Table Ill.
(75) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE III Properties of Beads Produced from High Purity Alumina in the Pin Mixer Loose Bulk Calcining Surface Area Pore Volume Density Temperature ° C. m.sup.2/g ml/g g/ml 1450 0.822 0.0035 1.41 1600 0.064 0.00026 2.15
(76) The beads described in this invention can be used as chemical carriers for oil field application, catalyst substrates, feed for various sapphire crystal forming methods that require free flowing, non-dusting particles or for crucible fill in sapphire production, and potentially as proppants for oil well applications