High temperature pressure digestion vessel system with dual action seal
10695738 ยท 2020-06-30
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01J19/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J2219/0295
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J2219/1233
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J2219/1236
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J2219/1227
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J3/03
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J19/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01J19/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J19/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J19/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J3/03
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A vessel system for high-pressure reactions is disclosed. The system includes a plugged polymer cylinder reaction vessel with a pressure vent opening extending radially through the wall of the reaction vessel and a supporting frame into which the vessel is received. Complementing keying structure elements on the vessel and on the frame limit the orientation of the reaction vessel in the supporting frame and the radially extending vent opening to a defined single position.
Claims
1. A method of carrying out high pressure reactions comprising: heating reactants in a reaction vessel that is closed with a sliding plug; and releasing gases from the reaction vessel by sliding the plug to open a radially extending vent opening in the reaction vessel, but without removing the sliding plug from the vessel or otherwise opening the vessel.
2. A method according to claim 1 wherein heating the reactants uses microwave radiation and wherein the reaction vessel is a microwave transparent polymer vessel.
3. A method according to claim 2 further comprising exerting a defined force against the sliding plug to preclude the plug from sliding until the gas pressure in the vessel exceeds the defined force being applied.
4. A method of carrying out high pressure reactions comprising: placing reagents in a polymer cylinder reaction vessel with a pressure vent opening extending radially through the wall of the reaction vessel, with the inner face of the reaction vessel wall including a reaction cylinder segment, a mouth cylinder segment wider than the reaction cylinder segment, and a tapered segment that extends between the reaction cylinder segment and the mouth cylinder segment; placing the reaction vessel in a cylindrical reinforcing sleeve so that the reinforcing sleeve surrounds portions of the reaction vessel other than the radially extending vent opening; placing a stepped sliding closure plug in the mouth cylinder segment of the reaction vessel and placing a dimensionally stable cap on the closure; placing the reaction vessel with the capped plug into a supporting frame; clamping the capped reaction vessel in the frame with a clamping bolt; keying the reaction vessel and the frame to one another to limit the orientation of the reaction vessel and the radially extending vent opening to a defined single position; and heating the reagents in the plugged, capped, clamped, keyed vessel and frame.
5. A high pressure reaction method according to claim 4 comprising: digesting a matrix selected from the group consisting of rocks, plants, soil, food, pharmaceuticals, plastics, metals and combinations thereof; in a strong mineral acid selected from the group consisting of sulfuric, hydrochloric, hydrofluoric, phosphoric, nitric and combinations thereof.
6. A high pressure reaction method according to claim 4 comprising extraction in organic solvents.
7. A high pressure reaction method according to claim 4 wherein the heating step is a microwave assisted heating step.
8. A high pressure reaction method according to claim 4 comprising placing the reaction vessel in a frame that defines a chamber for receiving the reaction vessel and in which one face of the frame defines a rectangular opening into which the reaction vessel and reinforcing sleeve can be inserted; and the opposite face of the frame defines a smaller rectangular opening that is smaller than the diameter of the reaction vessel and sleeve to thereby help seat the reaction vessel and the sleeve in the frame.
9. A high pressure reaction method according to claim 8 wherein: the reaction vessel has an outer ring on the outside of the reaction vessel at a position corresponding to the inner face of the mouth cylinder segment; and the keying step comprises positioning a pair of keying notches in the outer ring to engage opposing sides of the smaller rectangular opening in the frame.
10. A high pressure reaction method according to claim 9 wherein the step of placing the reaction vessel in the frame comprises aligning the frame includes a vent tube in the frame with the radially extending pressure vent opening in the reaction vessel so that gases released through the radially extending vent opening in the reaction vessel are directed through the vent tube in the frame.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(13) The invention is the combination of a vented polymer (PTFE is exemplary) reaction vessel, a surrounding composite sleeve, a closure plug, a closure cap on the closure plug, and a surrounding supporting frame into which the reaction vessel is received.
(14) The invention provides advantages over existing vessel systems (e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,795,608 and 6,136,276 respectively). As one improvement vessels, the invention provides a more robust vessel system that can withstand higher temperatures and pressures, including temperatures and pressures required for difficult digestion matrices.
(15) As another improvement, the invention offers a more secure closure with a better venting system combined with a narrower profile (i.e., more vessels in the microwave instrument at the same time).
(16) The PTFE vessel is closed with a molded or cast PTFE plug that has three identifiable sections. The lowest section has a circumferential taper to match the circumferential taper near (but not at) the top of the PTFE reaction vessel. A middle cylindrical segment of the plug is above (in the usual orientation) the tapered section, and a wider cylindrical top section is above the middle segment.
(17) The relationship between the polymer vessel and the composite sleeve is such that the sleeve extends along the side of the vessel to at least include the tapered portions of the vessel interior that meet the tapered portions of the solid plug. In previous vessels, the composite sleeve never reaches (axially) the sealing portion of the structure.
(18) The dimensionally stable cap covers both the solid plug and the upper rim of the reaction vessel. At an excess pressure, the plug will move axially in the vessel creating a small gap between the tapered and middle sections of the plug and the vessel walls. This pressure-induced gap creates a connection with a laterally extending pressure release opening in the vessel. Because the plug is stepped, however, the upper portions of the plug remain in constant contact with the upper rim of the reaction vessel. The structure keeps the remainder of the vessel sealed while venting takes place through the intended pressure release opening.
(19) The dimensionally stable cap is in the shape of an inverted U, and the legs meet the upper rim of the polymer reaction vessel to prevent circumferential expansion of the reaction vessel during gas release.
(20) The vessel, the closure elements, and the composite sleeve are used in conjunction with a frame that includes a vertically oriented bolt that is threaded and can be turned to exert force against the dimensionally stable cap.
(21) Because the taper of the plug is shallow, a smaller torque can be applied to the cap to obtain a satisfactory closure. For example, in the invention, the frame bolt can be hand torqued to about 15 inch-pounds. By comparison, in some current vessels, the bolt must be torqued, typically in a bench holder, to about 60 inch-pounds. Avoiding a bench torqueing step gives the invention corresponding time and efficiency advantages, particularly for laboratories carrying out many digestion tests on a repeated basis.
(22) As another advantage, the vessel system and the frame are keyed or clocked so that the vessel and closure can only be inserted into the frame in a single defined position, which in turn defines the position of the gas opening. This in turn allows a corresponding gas (vent) opening to be positioned in the frame so that exiting gases can be directed as desired. In most cases the gas opening will be directed inwardly; i.e., towards the center of the usual turntable arrangement of vessels.
(23) The closure system can be formed entirely of microwave transparent and acid resistant materials (by way of comparison, some current vessels incorporate a metal ring for some of the circumferential sealing). Finally the overall frame is taller and narrower, than many corresponding vessels and frames allowing for 16 vessel and frame combinations on the same turntable that holds (for example) 12 more conventional vessels and frames.
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(25) The reaction vessels per se are not illustrated in
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(27) The supporting frame 32 includes a frame vent tube 44 the operation of which complements that of the vessel 33, and in a manner better illustrated in
(28) The frame 32 defines a vessel chamber 36 into which the reaction vessel 33 is received. The control bolt 31 (shown with its threads 37) acts as a clamp when tightened against the dimensionally stable cap 34 to provide a closure force that keeps the reaction vessel closed at the elevated pressures generated during the heating step.
(29) As further details, the frame can be formed as a partially grooved workpiece in order to save both weight and material, and provided that the remainder of the frame is maintained strong enough for the intended purpose.
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(34) In the illustrated embodiment, and as is common in many circumstances, the reaction vessel 33 is surrounded by a sleeve 46. The combination offers a number of advantages. The reaction vessel 33 is formed of a polymer that is inert to the strong mineral acids used in digestion or the various organic solvents used in extraction. Fluoropolymers are exemplary for this purpose with polytetrafluoroethylene (e.g., Teflon) being particularly advantageous. PTFE-type materials are flexible at high pressures, however, and the sleeve 46 helps maintain the radial dimensional stability of the reaction vessel 33 during high temperature, high pressure reactions.
(35) For purposes of both strength and where necessary flexibility, the sleeve is a composite structure formed of one or more layers of woven engineering fiber and one or more appropriate polymers. The sleeve described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,534,140 is exemplary, but not limiting. In the microwave assisted context, such materials also remain transparent to microwave radiation.
(36) To maintain axial stability while the vessel and sleeve are in the frame 32, a PTFE seat 47 is positioned at the opposite end of the reaction vessel from the control bolt 31 and the closure 34, and is further seated in a signal transmission opening 50 which also serves to allow (for example) infrared temperature measurement of the vessel 33 during a reaction.
(37) The vessel and sleeve are sized to leave a small bottom gap 51 to allow the reaction vessel 33 to expand slightly along its axis, and a radial gap 52 is maintained between the vessel sleeve 46 and the vessel frame 32 to provide for some additional cooling.
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(40) The directional control of the venting also helps increase the overall safety of the system, and helps protect an operator by limiting vent fumes to an intended defined direction.
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(46) As used in this context, the term dimensionally stable means that the cap 34 is formed of a material that will not flex, expand, or contract under the normally expected temperatures, pressures and resulting forces generated inside the reaction vessel 33 during high-temperature digestion or extraction.
(47) A current embodiment is formed of polyether imide (PEI) of which ULTEM is a widely recognized commercial variant. In exemplary embodiments the closure is molded or cast around glass to increase its dimensional stability.
(48) Related engineering polymers include polyether ether keytone (PEEK) that likewise has excellent mechanical and chemical resistance properties at high temperatures. Persons skilled in this art will be able to select one of these or other engineering polymers without undue experimentation.
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(50) In some embodiments, the angle of the tapered portion 72 on the plug 45 differs slightly from the angle of the tapered section 65 at the mouth 64 of the reaction vessel 33; e.g., by about 2. This encourages the lowermost part of the tapered portion 72 to be the first portion to engage the mouth 64 of the reaction vessel 33. In turn, this reduces the unit force required to create a seal as compared to identical tapered angles.
(51) The annular ring 70 on the dimensionally stable cap 34 prevents radial expansion of the entire closure at the top of the vessel 33.
(52) The relatively shallow taper of the mouth segment 65, designated as theta () in
(53) The shallow taper or bite of the vessel 33 and plug 45 provide a further potential advantage in certain digestions. As the skilled person recognizes, when the matrix contains a number of different materials (i.e., is heterogeneous), some of those materials will digest at lower temperatures than others; indeed, some will start digesting in strong mineral acids at room temperature. Accordingly, some of these materials will provide an early release of significant amounts of volatile materials, frequently carbon dioxide and water vapor. In these circumstances, the pressure inside the vessel 33 can reach the matching pressure of the bolt 31 and frame 32 against the plug 45 at a relatively low temperature and before the remainder of the matrix digests. At that point, the plug 45 will move slightly in an axial direction to permit an early pressure release, but will return quickly to its seated position so that the reaction in the vessel 33 continues to the higher temperatures required to obtain a full digestion of the more difficult portions of such matrices.
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(56) This slight disengagement is sufficient to allow gases to escape from the interior of the reaction vessel 33 past the circumferential tapered portion and first cylindrical section 73 of the plug 45 and then through the vessel vent opening 35. As illustrated and exemplary, the frame vent tube 44 is oriented and aligned with the vessel vent opening 35 so that the vented gases travel immediately through the frame vent tube; i.e. at an intended position and in an intended direction. This alignment is, of course, a result of the key elements described with respect to
(57) During the escape of gases, however, the vessel matching section 74 remains entirely engaged to upper portions of the mouth cylinder segment 66 of the vessel 33 so that the vessel remains otherwise closed at its mouth. When sufficient gas has been released to reduce the pressure inside the vessel to equilibrate with the force applied by the control bolt 31, the bolt 31 and the dimensionally stable cap 34 urges and slides the plug 45 back into a fully seated position that prevents gases from escaping.
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(59) In a method context, the invention includes the steps of heating reactants in a reaction vessel that is closed with a sliding plug, and then releasing gases from the reaction vessel by sliding the plug to open a radially extending vent opening in the reaction vessel, but without removing the sliding plug from the vessel or otherwise opening the vessel.
(60) In exemplary embodiments, the method includes heating reactions inside the vessel using microwave radiation in a microwave transparent polymer vessel, and exerting a defined force against the sliding plug to preclude the plug from sliding until the gas pressure in the vessel exceeds the defined force being applied.
(61) In the drawings and specification there has been set forth a preferred embodiment of the invention, and although specific terms have been employed, they are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for purposes of limitation, the scope of the invention being defined in the claims.