Heater and related methods therefor
10315181 ยท 2019-06-11
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01J2219/00155
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J2219/00135
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J19/0013
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F28F9/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B01J19/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C01B33/10757
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
B01J19/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J19/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The invention relates generally to heaters and methods of using the heaters. In certain embodiments, a heater includes a pressure shell having a cylindrical heating cavity, an annular heat shield disposed within the cylindrical heating cavity, and at least one heating element disposed within an interior volume of the annular heat shield. In another embodiment, a method of preparing a trichlorosilane includes introducing a reactant stream comprising silicon tetrachloride into a heater, passing electrical current through a heating element to heat the reactant stream, and introducing the heated reactant stream into a reactor.
Claims
1. A method of facilitating trichlorosilane production, comprising: introducing a reactant stream containing at least one of silicon tetrachloride and hydrogen into an inlet of a heater having: a pressure shell enclosing a heating chamber; a heat shield shaped as an open-ended cylinder, said cylindrical heat shield being disposed within the heating chamber and concentric therewith; at least one heating element shaped as an open-ended cylinder, said cylindrical heating element being disposed within an interior volume of the cylindrical heat shield and concentric therewith; and a spacer shaped as a closed-ended cylinder, said spacer being disposed within an interior volume of the cylindrical heating element; causing at least a portion of said reactant stream to flow through an annular heating region defined by said cylindrical heat shield and said spacer, thereby bringing the reactant stream into direct physical contact with the cylindrical heating element; and directing said reactant stream through an outlet of the heater and into an inlet of any of a hydrochlorination reactor and a hydrogenation reactor.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising applying electrical current to said at least one heating element from at least one electrical power source.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the reactant stream flows from the inlet to the outlet through a channel that does not reverse its direction.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The accompanying drawings are not drawn to scale. In the drawings, each identical or nearly identical component that is illustrated in the various figures is represented by a like numeral. For purposes of clarity, not every component may be labeled in every drawing.
(2) In the drawings:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8) One or more aspects of the present invention can pertain to heating systems or heating apparatus or heaters and to methods of use as well as to methods of facilitating heating operations for chemical processes. Further aspects of the invention can pertain to heaters having at least one heating element that is wetted by the process fluid to be heated. Still further aspects of the invention can pertain to heaters having pressurized heating chambers, including configurations having surfaces that are wetted by the process fluid to be heated. Other aspects of the invention can pertain to heaters having corrosion resistant wetted surfaces. Still other aspects of the invention can pertain to heaters having heating elements or component that that are enclosed within a pressure envelope of the heater. In accordance with one or more particular aspects of the invention, the heater can comprise a vessel with a pressure membrane or shell that encloses the process fluid or reactant stream to be heated with one or more heating zones or regions and preferably one or more barrier, buffer, or cooling zones or regions.
(9) One or more embodiments of the invention can be directed to a vessel such as a heater with a shell that can serve as a pressure membrane or pressure vessel. The shell can have one or more heating cavities defined therein. The heater typically further comprises at least one heating element, which is typically disposed in the one or more of the heating cavities. Further notable configurations of the heater in accordance with further aspects of the invention can involve utilizing one or more heat shields. Still further configurations in accordance with one or more aspects of the invention can involve the heater having one or more cylindrically-shaped spacer structures disposed within an interior region of the heating element within the one or more heating cavities. The heater is typically fluidly connected or connectable to one or more reactors and to one or more sources of reactants.
(10) As illustrated in the non-limiting configuration presented in
(11) Heater 100 typically further comprises one or more heating elements 130 that is disposed within interior volume 125 of shield 120. Also as illustrated, heating element 130 is configured as an annular structure having an interior region 135.
(12) Heater 100 can further comprise one or more spacers 140 disposed within interior region 135 of annular heating element 130. Further, heater 100 comprises one or more inlet ports 150 and one or more outlet ports 160. Heater 100 typically further comprises one or more electrical connector ports 170. In accordance with a particular use, the one or more inlet ports 150 of heater 100 can be fluidly connected or connectable to one or more upstream unit operations such as one or more sources of reactants (not shown) and the one or more outlet ports 160 can be fluidly connected or connectable to one or more downstream unit operations (also not shown). Non-limiting examples of downstream unit operations include distillation columns, heat exchangers, and reactors such as fluidized bed reactors.
(13) Other configurations of the components of heater 100 can involve utilizing one or more rod-shaped shaped heating elements disposed within cavity 115. For example, a plurality of parallel rods (not shown) can be longitudinally disposed within cavity 115.
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(15) The heater typically comprises a plurality of chucks that accommodate electrical connectivity between the at least one heating element and one or more electrical power supplies. For example, as shown in
(16) In an exemplary use directed to, for example, trichlorosilane production, heater 100 can be fluidly connected to one or more reactant sources. Variants of such a configuration can involve utilizing one or more parallel heaters, each of which can be fluidly connected at respective inlet ports thereof to one or more sources of silicon tetrachloride, hydrogen, or mixtures thereof. The one or more reactants can be introduced into the heater through inlet 150 as an inlet stream. Within heater 100, inlet stream can have a plurality of flow paths within heating chamber 115. In accordance with one or more aspects of the invention, the inlet stream can comprise a first or to be heated stream directed to flow within a first region that includes at least a portion, typically all, of the heating surfaces of heating element 130. As exemplarily illustrated in
(17) Among some of the particular advantageous features of the invention is that the heaters have internal components that are encased within the pressure shell 110, which allows failure of any of such components without escape of the pressurized fluid stream from the pressure envelope. In further advantageous aspects of the invention, in contrast to prior art immersion-type heaters, the heater of the present invention can utilize heating elements, with electrical current passing therethrough, that are wetted by the fluid to be heated. In still further advantageous aspects of the invention, the heater can utilize convective heat transfer from a wetted surface of an electrically energized heating element to the fluid to be heated. In yet further aspects of the invention, heat energy is predominantly convectively transferred to the fluid to be heated from a surface of a heating element, In yet other aspects of the invention, heat is not conductively transferred from the surface of the electrically energized heating element.
(18) Controller system that can be utilized to facilitate a target reactant temperature can involve utilizing one or more controllers that employ any of feedback or feedforward, or both, algorithms. For example, the control system can have a microprocessor that receives one or more input signals from one or more sensors, and generate one or more output signals that adjusts an operating parameter, e.g., potential or current, or both, of the electrical energy passed through the heating element. The one or more sensors can be, for example, temperature sensors and flow sensors, any of which can be disposed upstream of inlet 150 or downstream of outlet 160.
(19) The materials of construction of the various components of the heater can be metallic, such as steel that is resistant to corrosion of the fluid at the operating conditions of the heater. For example, pressure shell 110, shield 120, and spacer 140 can be comprised of stainless steel, high nickel steel such as any of the grades of any of INCOLOY and INCONEL steel.
(20) Having now described some illustrative configurations and embodiments of the invention, it should be apparent to those skilled in the art that the foregoing is merely illustrative and not limiting, having been presented by way of example only. Numerous modifications and other embodiments are within the scope of one of ordinary skill in the art and are contemplated as falling within the scope of the invention. In particular, although many of the examples presented herein involve specific combinations of method acts or system elements, it should be understood that those acts and those elements may be combined in other ways to accomplish the same objectives.
(21) Those skilled in the art should appreciate that the parameters and configurations described herein are exemplary and that actual parameters and/or configurations will depend on the specific application in which the systems and techniques of the invention are used. Those skilled in the art should also recognize or be able to ascertain, using no more than routine experimentation, equivalents to the specific embodiments of the invention. It is therefore to be understood that the embodiments described herein are presented by way of example only and that, within the scope of the appended claims and equivalents thereto; the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.
(22) Moreover, it should also be appreciated that the invention is directed to each feature, system, subsystem, or technique described herein and any combination of two or more features, systems, subsystems, or techniques described herein and any combination of two or more features, systems, subsystems, and/or methods, if such features, systems, subsystems, and techniques are not mutually inconsistent, is considered to be within the scope of the invention as embodied in the claims. Further, acts, elements, and features discussed only in connection with one embodiment are not intended to be excluded from a similar role in other embodiments.
(23) As used herein, the term plurality refers to two or more items or components. The terms comprising, including, carrying, having, containing, and involving, whether in the written description or the claims and the like, are open-ended terms, i.e., to mean including but not limited to. Thus, the use of such terms is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter, and equivalents thereof, as well as additional items. Only the transitional phrases consisting of and consisting essentially of, are closed or semi-closed transitional phrases, respectively, with respect to the claims. Use of ordinal terms such as first, second, third, and the like in the claims to modify a claim element does not by itself connote any priority, precedence, or order of one claim element over another or the temporal order in which acts of a method are performed, but are used merely as labels to distinguish one claim element having a certain name from another element having a same name (but for use of the ordinal term) to distinguish the claim elements.