AMMONIA BURNER FOR NITRIC ACID PRODUCTION

20240002231 ยท 2024-01-04

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    An ammonia burner comprising an ammonia section for ammonia oxidation and a combined heat exchange section for heating a process stream, wherein said ammonia section and heat exchange section are coaxially arranged in a pressure vessel of the burner and the hot nitrogen oxides-containing effluent gas from the ammonia section is directed to a shell side of the heat exchange section so that said effluent gas transfers heat to the process stream.

    Claims

    1-18. (canceled)

    19. An ammonia burner reactor for catalytic oxidation of gaseous ammonia in a nitric acid production process, the ammonia burner reactor comprising: an ammonia oxidation section suitable for catalytic oxidation of gaseous ammonia in presence of oxygen to produce a nitrogen oxides-containing effluent gas; wherein the ammonia burner includes a heat exchange section, wherein said heat exchange section occupies a central axial region of the ammonia burner reactor and said ammonia oxidation section has an annular configuration and is arranged coaxially around the heat exchange section; wherein the heat exchange section includes a first side arranged to be traversed by a process stream and a second side arranged to be traversed by at least part of said nitrogen oxides-containing gas effluent from the ammonia oxidation section; wherein said first side and said second side of the heat exchange section are arranged so that said first side and said second side are not in a fluid communication, while heat can be transferred from the nitrogen oxides-containing gas flowing in the second side to the process stream flowing in the first side, so that the nitrogen oxides-containing gas in the second side can be a heat source for the process stream.

    20. The ammonia burner reactor of claim 19, wherein the heat exchange section includes a bundle of tubes, said first side being the inside of the bundle of tubes and said second side being a region outside and around the bundle of tubes.

    21. The ammonia burner reactor of claim 19 wherein the ammonia oxidation section is arranged to be traversed with a radial or axial-radial flow and an ammonia oxidation catalyst for the catalytic oxidation is in a granular form.

    22. The ammonia burner reactor of claim 19, further comprising: wherein the ammonia oxidation section includes a catalytic basket, which contains an ammonia oxidation catalyst; a plurality of radially arranged beams arranged to support said catalytic basket; each of said plurality of radially arranged beams extends from an inner beam support to an outer beam support, the inner support being integral with an internal shell delimiting the shell side of the heat exchange section.

    23. The ammonia burner reactor of claim 22, wherein: the outer beam support is integral with a wall surrounding the annular ammonia oxidation section and delimiting a cooling channel between said wall and a pressure vessel of the reactor.

    24. The ammonia burner reactor of claim 22, further comprising a heat exchanger is interposed between the catalyst-retaining basket and the plurality of radially arranged beams.

    25. The ammonia burner reactor of claim 22 wherein said plurality of radially arranged beams are hollow bodies including an internal channel arranged to be traversed by a cooling medium, said cooling medium being a portion of a mixture of ammonia and an oxidant fed to the combined reactor.

    26. The ammonia burner reactor of claim 25, further comprising at least a first inlet for a primary stream of said mixture of ammonia and oxidant, which is directed to the ammonia oxidation section, and a second inlet for a secondary stream of said mixture, wherein said second inlet is in communication with the internal channels of the support beams, so that said secondary stream traverses the internal channels of the support beams acting as a cooling medium before joining with the primary stream.

    27. The ammonia burner reactor of claim 22 wherein the ammonia oxidation section includes an ammonia oxidation catalyst in the form of a catalyst gauze including one or more layers of a wire gauze and the catalyst gauze is divided into multiple radial segments.

    28. The ammonia burner reactor of claim 27 wherein said multiple radial segments are arranged so that adjacent radial segments of the multiple radial segments overlap and a number of the overlapping radial segments is constant over a surface of the catalyst gauze.

    29. The ammonia burner reactor of claim 28, wherein the multiple radial segments are fixed on the wall of the catalytic basket through a support including multiple concentric rings or a ring arranged in sectors.

    30. A plant for the production of nitric acid including the ammonia burner reactor of claim 18, wherein the first side of the heat exchange section of the ammonia burner reactor is connected to a line carrying a process stream of the nitric acid production process.

    31. The plant of claim 30, further comprising an absorber wherein nitric acid and a tail gas are produced, said line connected to the first side of the heat exchange section of the ammonia burner reactor is a line arranged to feed said tail gas of the absorber to an expander for energy recovery, so that the heat exchange section of the ammonia burner acts as heater of the tail gas before expansion.

    32. The plant of claim 30 wherein said line, which is connected to the first side of the heat exchange section of the ammonia burner reactor, is part of a steam system of the plant so that the heat exchange section of the ammonia burner acts as heat recovery exchanger for the production of steam which is incorporated in the ammonia burner.

    33. The plant of claim 30 wherein said line, which is connected to the first side of the heat exchange section of the ammonia burner reactor, is part of an ammonia plant coupled to the nitric acid plant and said line is carrying a mixture of hydrocarbon and steam to be reformed, so that the heat exchange section of the ammonia burner acts as a gas-heated reformer incorporated in the ammonia burner.

    34. A process for synthesis of nitric acid, the process comprising: catalytic oxidation of ammonia to obtain a nitrogen-oxides containing gas; absorption of said nitrogen-oxides containing gas, after a removal of nitrous oxide N.sub.2O, to obtain nitric acid and a tail gas; wherein: catalytic oxidation of ammonia is performed in the ammonia burner reactor of claim 19; at least part of said nitrogen-oxides containing gas produced by the oxidation of ammonia traverses the first side of the heat exchange section of the ammonia burner reactor, transferring heat to a process stream traversing the second side of said section, said process stream being any of: a tail gas resulting from the absorption step and directed to expansion, so that the tail gas is heated before expansion; a cooling stream of water or steam; or a mixture of hydrocarbon and steam so that the heat from said hot gas is used for a gas-heated reforming process of said mixture.

    Description

    DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

    [0056] The invention is now further elucidated with reference to preferred embodiments and with the help of the figures.

    [0057] FIG. 1 is a schematic representation of an ammonia burner according to an embodiment of the invention.

    [0058] FIG. 2 is a schematic representation of the heat exchange section of the ammonia burner according to a first embodiment.

    [0059] FIG. 3 is a schematic representation of the heat exchange section of the ammonia burner according to a second embodiment.

    [0060] FIG. 4 is a scheme of a cooling system of the support beams which may be provided in the ammonia burner according to an embodiment.

    [0061] FIG. 5 is a schematic representation of radial segments of a catalyst gauze.

    [0062] FIG. 6 is a simplified block scheme of a first embodiment of a nitric acid synthesis plant including the ammonia burner of FIG. 1.

    [0063] FIG. 7 is scheme of a second embodiment of a nitric acid synthesis plant including the ammonia burner of FIG. 1.

    [0064] FIG. 8 is a scheme of an integrated plant for the synthesis of ammonia and nitric acid wherein ammonia oxidation and hydrocarbons reforming are carried out in a combined ammonia burner and GHR according to an embodiment of the invention.

    [0065] FIG. 1 illustrates an ammonia burner reactor, or simply ammonia burner 1, including an axial-flow ammonia oxidation section 2 and a heat exchange section 3.

    [0066] The ammonia oxidation section 2 and the heat exchange section 3 are contained in a pressure vessel P of the ammonia burner 1. The ammonia burner 1 is substantially symmetric around a main vertical axis A-A. The oxidation section 2 is axial-flow because it is traversed by the gas substantially in the direction of the axis A-A.

    [0067] The main inputs and outputs of the ammonia burner 1 are: an input nozzle 18 for a gaseous mixture 4 of ammonia and air; an output nozzle 11 for a cooled ammonia oxidation gas 403 produced in the oxidation section 2; an input nozzle 19 for a process stream 9; an output nozzle 17 for said process stream, which leaves the heat exchange section 3 as heated stream 90.

    [0068] The oxidation section 2 and the heat exchange section 3 are coaxially arranged relative to the main axis A-A. More specifically, the oxidation section 2 has an annular shape and is coaxially arranged around the heat exchange section 3.

    [0069] The ammonia oxidation section 2 includes a catalyst-retaining basket 6. The catalyst-retaining basket 6 comprises a catalyst (e.g. PtRh) gauze 61 suitable for oxidising gaseous ammonia in the presence of oxygen. The basket 6 may also comprise an inert filling layer 62 positioned below the catalyst gauze 61. Said inert layer 62 uniforms the pressure drop and the gas distribution across the gauze 61.

    [0070] The ammonia oxidation section 2 further includes a gas distributor 7. The gas distributor 7 may include a honeycomb grid optimised to distribute the gas flow across the catalyst-retaining basket.

    [0071] The ammonia-air input nozzle 18 is in communication with the distribution device 7 via a peripheral channel 5 delimited between an internal cylindrical wall 43 and an outer wall of the pressure vessel P of the burner.

    [0072] The cylindrical wall 43 surrounds the annular ammonia oxidation section (basket wall) and preferably also the perimeter base of the burner.

    [0073] Preferably the channel 5 has a heat-reflective coating 401 to avoid excessive thermal stress on the wall of the pressure vessel P caused by the hot ammonia oxidation gas 402 exiting the catalyst retaining basket 6.

    [0074] The heat exchange section 3 includes a shell-and-tube heat exchanger with a bundle of tubes 8. The inlet of the tubes 8 is in communication with the input nozzle 19 and the outlet of the tubes 8 is in communication with the output nozzle 17.

    [0075] The tube bundle of the heat exchange section 3 is preferably removable from the ammonia burner 1. Preferably the tube bundle can be extracted from top of the burner 1.

    [0076] On top of the heat exchange section 3, a distributor is provided, having a first chamber 700 in communication with the inlet 9 and the inlet of tubes 8, and a second chamber 701 in communication with the outlet of tubes and with the output 17.

    [0077] The inside of the tubes 8 represents a first side, i.e. a tube side, of the heat exchange section 3. The ammonia burner 1 further includes an internal shell 16 around the tubes 8. Said shell 16 delimits a region around the tubes 8 which represents a second side, i.e. a shell side 301, of the heat exchange section 3.

    [0078] Said shell side 301 is arranged to receive the ammonia oxidation gas 402 from the ammonia oxidation section 2. Particularly, the shell side 301 is in communication with a collection chamber 14 wherein the effluent 402 of the burner is collected. Preferably, as in FIG. 1, said collection chamber 14 is in the lower part of the ammonia burner 1.

    [0079] The shell side 301 is also in fluid communication with the output nozzle 11, through which the ammonia oxidation gas leaves the burner 1.

    [0080] In a preferred embodiment the shell side 301 has a gas inlet port 302 arranged at a lower end of the bundle of tubes 8. Accordingly, a gas flow in the shell side 301, entering via the port 302, is substantially directed upwards leaving the heat exchange section 3 from the output nozzle 11 located in the upper end of the ammonia burner.

    [0081] The shell side 301 is not in fluid communication with the tube side, i.e. with the inlet of the tubes 8. Accordingly, the ammonia oxidation gas 402 does not mix with the process stream 9 in the tubes.

    [0082] The basket 6 is supported by a plurality of radial support beams 10. Each of the support beams 10 rests isostatically over an outer ring 42 and an inner ring 41. The outer ring 42 is preferably integral with the internal cylindrical wall 43 of the cooling channel 5 and the inner ring 41 is preferably integral with the shell 16. Intermediate supports 12 may be added in the chamber 14 to support the radial beams 10 and provide further mechanical stability to the catalyst-retaining basket 6.

    [0083] Looking at FIG. 1 it can be appreciated that, due to the coaxial arrangement of the ammonia burner section 2 and heat exchange section 3, the support beams 10 are relatively short. The distance between the supports 41 and 42 is reduced compared to a conventional design of ammonia burners with full-diameter support beams. A related advantage is a less severe stress of said beams 10 and the possibility to avoid cooling of the beams. Particularly the reduced size of said support beams 10 enables to re-size the ammonia burner to reach high productivity in nitrogen oxides gas that is the precursor reagent for the synthesis of nitric acid.

    [0084] A heat exchanger 501 can be interposed between the catalyst-retaining basket 6 and the support beams 10. This heat exchanger 501 removes heat from the hot effluent gas 402 and reduces the thermal stress on the beams 10. However, due to the reduced length of the beams 10, an embodiment is also possible wherein no such heat exchanger is provided.

    [0085] The operation of the ammonia burner 1 of FIG. 1 is the following. The ammonia-air mixture 4 entering via the nozzle 18 cools down the pressure vessel P while passing in the cooling channel 5 and finally enters the ammonia oxidation section 2 via the top distributor 7. The oxidation section 2 is traversed with a substantially axial flow, parallel to the axis A-A and directed downward. The ammonia in the mixture 4 is oxidised leading to the gas stream 402 comprising N.sub.2O and nitrogen oxides NO.sub.x, which is collected in the lower chamber 14. The term of NO.sub.x is used below to collectively denote NO, NO.sub.2 and N.sub.2O.sub.4.

    [0086] The collection chamber 14, wherein the effluent 402 of the ammonia burner 2 is collected before the passage through the heat exchange section 2, may help the ammonia oxidation reaction reach a thermodynamic equilibrium.

    [0087] From the chamber 14, the ammonia oxidation gas 402 enters the shell side 301 of the heat exchange section 3 via the lower port 302. In the shell side 301, the ammonia oxidation gas 402 flows upward and transfers heat to the tubes 8, eventually leaving the shell side via the nozzle 11 as cooled gas 403.

    [0088] The process stream 9 enters the tubes 8 from the first chamber 700 and is collected in the second chamber 701 after passage in the tubes where it is heated by the hot gas 402 flowing around the tubes.

    [0089] The ammonia oxidation gas 402 may have a temperature of about 800-1000 C., for example of about 850 to 950 C. The cooled gas 403 may have a temperature of about 300 to 700 C., for example of about 450 to 600 C.

    [0090] FIGS. 2 and 3 illustrate other embodiments of the heat exchange section 3.

    [0091] FIG. 2 illustrates a heat exchange section 3 with a bayonet-tube heat exchanger 605. The exchanger 605 includes bayonet tubes wherein each tube has an inner passage 601 and an outer passage 602. In each tube, the outer passage 602 is arranged coaxially around the inner passage 601. The inner passage 601 is in fluid communication with the input nozzle 19 via a distribution chamber 603. The outer passage 602 is in fluid communication with the output nozzle 17 via a collection chamber 604.

    [0092] FIG. 3 is a scheme of a heat exchange section 3 with multiple passages in the shell side. The multiple passages are delimited by internal shells 801, 802 and an outer shell 803. The shell side includes a first region 804 delimited by the shell 801 and a second region 805 around said shell 801. Said two regions 804, 805 may accommodate two tube bundles. In the example the region 804 is traversed first by the hot gas 402. For example, a tube bundle in the region 805 may be an evaporator and a tube bundle in the region 804 may be a steam superheater.

    [0093] In another embodiment, which is a variant of FIG. 1, the tubes may have inlets and outlets on concentric portions of the tube sheet.

    [0094] FIG. 4 illustrates schematically an embodiment wherein the radial beams 10 are internally cooled. Particularly, the beams 10 are traversed by some or all of the ammonia-air mixture 4.

    [0095] The support beams 10 and the vertical supports 12 in this embodiment are hollow bodies having an internal channel. The internal channels of the beams 10 and supports 12 are in fluid communication between each other. Particularly each radial beam 10 has a channel with an inlet side and an outlet side wherein the inlet side is in communication with an inlet nozzle 505 via the internal channel of at least one vertical support 12 and a cooling channel 750 that develops partially along the walls of the vessel P; the outlet side is in communication with a toroidal distributor 409 by means of a duct 503 and a passage 504.

    [0096] A heat-reflective coating 401 can be wrapped around the cooling channel 750 and/or the toroidal distributor 409 to shield the wall of the pressure vessel P from the hot ammonia oxidation gas 402.

    [0097] It can be seen from FIG. 4 that a portion 500 of the ammonia-air mixture, which is admitted at the input nozzle 505, traverses the internal channel of support beams 10 acting as a cooling medium, before joining with the rest of the ammonia-air mixture in the distributor 409 from which it passes into the channel 5.

    [0098] The ammonia-air mixture 4 entering at the nozzle 18 may be regarded as a primary stream of ammonia-air, while the mixture 500 entering at nozzle 505 may be regarded as a secondary stream of ammonia-air. The flow rate of said secondary stream may be controlled with suitable means, e.g. a valve, based on the reaction conditions, to ensure that the temperature of the beams 10 is maintained within an acceptable range.

    [0099] The distributor 409 may be simplified in the embodiment with internally cooled beams 10. The distributor 409 may be realised as a toroidal tube inside or outside the vessel P.

    [0100] The catalyst gauze 61 may be arranged into multiple radial segments. FIG. 5 illustrates an example of three radial segments 20, 21, 22 of a segmented catalytic gauze. The catalyst segments may be fixed on the wall of the catalyst-retaining basket through a support comprising multiple concentric rings or a ring divided in sectors attached (e.g. bolted) to the internal wall of the basket.

    [0101] The catalytic gauze, or its radial segments, may include multiple layers of wire gauzes preferably between 10 to 50 and more preferably between 10 to 30.

    [0102] FIG. 6 illustrates a scheme of a nitric acid synthesis plant including the ammonia burner 1 of FIG. 1.

    [0103] A stream of ammonia 130 and air 38 are mixed together to form the input mixture 4 feed to the ammonia burner 1. This ammonia stream 130 may be the full output of an ammonia synthesis plant or only a part thereof. The mixing between the ammonia stream 130 and air 38 may occur prior to the burner 1, as shown in FIG. 6, or through direct injection into the ammonia oxidation section 2 using two separate lines carrying ammonia and air as separate streams.

    [0104] The cooled NOx-containing gas 403 is sent to an absorption tower 31 wherein NO.sub.2 is absorbed in water to yield nitric acid 32 and a tail gas 33 mostly composed of nitrogen with N.sub.2O and residual amounts of NO.sub.x.

    [0105] Said tail gas 33 is further heated in a heat exchanger 40, and processed in unit 34 for removal of NOx and optionally of N.sub.2O. The so obtained cleaned gas 35 is work-expanded in an expander 36 for energy recovery and the expanded gas 37 at the exhaust is discharged into the atmosphere.

    [0106] The hot process stream 90 (e.g. steam) leaving the heat exchange section 3 of the ammonia burner 1 may be work-expanded in an expander for energy recovery or may be used or partially used to heat the tail gas 33 leaving the adsorption tower 31 in the heat exchange 40 (not shown in the figure).

    [0107] FIG. 7 illustrates a variant embodiment wherein the ammonia burner 1 is used to heat the tail gas 33 of the absorption tower 31. The tail gas 33 traverses the tube side of the heat exchange section 3 and leaves the combined burner 1 as heated gas 900 sent to the above described unit 34 and expander 36. Compared with FIG. 6, it can be said that the heat exchange section 3 incorporated in the ammonia burner 1 replaces the tail gas heater 40.

    [0108] In this embodiment, the NOx-containing gas 403 is further cooled in a heat exchanger 30 before it reaches the absorption tower 31. This cooling may be appropriate if the heat removed by the gas 33 is not sufficient to cool the gas to the appropriate temperature for the absorber 31.

    [0109] FIG. 8 illustrates an embodiment wherein the combined ammonia burner 1 performs the function of a gas-heated reactor for a tied-in ammonia synthesis section.

    [0110] A section 39 for the synthesis of nitric acid is coupled with a section 100 for the synthesis of ammonia. Said ammonia section 100 essentially includes a front-end which provides a make-up gas 119 and a synthesis loop 102 which converts said make-up gas 119 into ammonia 120. The synthesis loop 102 is fed by a syngas compressor 103.

    [0111] The process stream 9 in this example is a mixture 152 of natural gas NG and steam PS. The stream 90 represents a reformed gas which is sent to the front-end of the ammonia plant, where it is cooled and purified to obtain the make-up gas 119.

    [0112] An ammonia stream 130 taken from the output of the synthesis loop 102 is directed to the combined ammonia burner 1. Together with air 38, said ammonia stream 130 forms the input mixture 4. This ammonia stream 130 may be the full output of the loop 102 or only a part thereof. The cooled ammonia oxidation gas 150 leaving the ammonia burner 1 is processed in the nitric acid section 39 for the production of nitric acid 32.

    [0113] The NOx-containing gas 150 is further cooled in a first heat exchanger 26 and then in a second heat exchanger 30. The so obtained cooled gas 403 is sent to the absorption tower 31 wherein NO.sub.2 is absorbed in water to yield nitric acid 32 and tail gas 33. Said tail gas 33 is heated in the first heat exchanger 26, with heat removed from the gas 403; processed in unit 34 for removal of NO.sub.x and N.sub.2O; then expanded as above described.

    [0114] In the ammonia section 100, the hydrogen-containing reformed gas 90 obtained from the GHR section 151 is cooled in a heat exchanger 107 and subject to a water-shift reaction in a shift reactor 105 and removal of CO.sub.2 in a suitable CO.sub.2 removal section 106, for example a pressure swing adsorption (PSA) section. Said CO.sub.2 removal section provides a substantially CO.sub.2-free purified gas 116 and a CO.sub.2-containing tail gas 117.

    [0115] If necessary, said purified gas 116 may be added with nitrogen 118 to provide the make-up gas 119 with the required H.sub.2:N.sub.2 molar ratio for the ammonia synthesis reaction. The so obtained make-up gas 119 is then fed to the syngas compressor 103 and to the ammonia synthesis loop 102.

    [0116] The heat removed from hot gas in the various heat exchangers may be used for the production of steam.