Methanol production from methane and carbon dioxide

10040737 ยท 2018-08-07

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    Carbon dioxide is reacted with methane in a free radical reaction to produce methanol and carbon monoxide. A system for producing carbon dioxide as a feed ingredient for the process through electric power generator is disclosed.

    Claims

    1. A process for the production of methanol and carbon monoxide from methane and carbon dioxde in a single step using a flow reactor and comprising a non-catalytic free radical reaction involving CH3 and H, H as reactive free radicals conducted at about one atmosphere pressure and at a temperature in the range of 600 C. to 1000 C.

    2. A process for the production of methanol comprising the steps of: a. mixing carbon dioxide with methane at a temperature of between about 600 C. and 1000 C. using a flow reactor and in the absence of a catalyst in a free radical reaction to produce methanol and carbon monoxide; and b. separating the carbon monoxide from the methanol.

    3. The process of claim 2 wherein the reactants carbon dioxide and methane are quenched after high temperature mixing.

    4. A process for the production of electric powers comprising the steps of: a. driving a turbine by combustion gas to produce flue gases; b. recovering carbon dioxide from flue gases produced in step (a); and c. using the carbon dioxide in the process of claim 3 to produce methanol.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING

    (1) FIG. 1 is a rendering of the process indicating the feed streams to a reactor and the product produced; and

    (2) FIG. 2 shows a practical application of the present invention in the production of electric power.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION

    (3) The present invention takes advantage of two factors: first, the perceived urgency to recover and sequester large quantities of carbon dioxide to mitigate the effects of global warming; second, the availability of new supplies of cheap natural gas from fracking, take advantage of these two factors by reacting. carbon dioxide with methane gas to make methanol.

    (4) The chemistry works in favor of a useful product. The free radical reactions that take place by combining methane with carbon dioxide are shown as follows.
    CH.sub.4+CH3.sup.+H.sup.4.
    CH.sub.4+OH.sup.+CH.sub.30H+H.sup.5.
    CO.sub.2+H.sup.+CO+OH.sup.6.
    CH.sub.3.sup.+OH.sup.+CH.sub.30H7.

    (5) In the above series of equations, equation no. 4 represents the initiation reaction. Equation nos. 5 and 6 represent the chain reactions. And equation no. 7 is the terminal reaction.

    (6) As in any free radical phenomena, the overall reaction is extremely fast because the chain reactions occur with lightning speed. No catalyst is required under these conditions.

    (7) When equation nos. 5 and 6 are combined, the net result is the following.
    CH.sub.4+CO.sub.2.fwdarw.CH.sub.3OH+CO8.

    (8) This is the same outcome as can be obtained by existing technology (equation no. 3), except that the present invention achieves the result in a one-step process that proceeds with high efficiency.

    (9) In the free radical reactions that take place, the radicals H.sup. and OH.sup. are the same ones that occur in the combustion of fuels. The methanol product is relatively stable as suggested by the process for formaldehyde, which requires a catalyst at 600 to 650 C. to decompose methanol. Finally, carbon monoxide can be thought of as a sink in the reaction mechanism. The bond dissociation energy for CO is 1076.5 kJ/mol, exceeding by far other bond energies.

    (10) The conditions for the free radical reaction of the present invention are critical. Near atmospheric pressure is assumed. This mirrors combustion reactions. The temperatures of the reaction must be sufficiently high to sever the chemical bonds. From experience, the temperature is in the range of 600 to 1000 C. The holding time at this temperature is extremely short, thus requiring a flow reactor design.

    (11) The simplicity of the present invention is illustrated by FIG. 1. Reactor 1, for example, comprises a coil of hollow tubing through which the reactants flow. This coil is heated in a furnace. The exit gases are quenched and product is separated at 3 from carbon monoxide.

    (12) An application of the present invention is shown in FIG. 2 for electric power generation. Turbine 4 is driven by combustion gases. Absorption Column 5 and Stripping Column 6 recover carbon dioxide from the flue gas. Methane and carbon dioxide produce methanol and carbon monoxide in Reactor 7. The separate units are integrated so that the only product is methanol.

    SUMMARY

    (13) Methyl alcohol or methanol is produced from methane and carbon dioxide in a free radical reaction. In the process, the two reactants are mixed and heated to a high temperature and rapidly quenched, thereby producing methanol and carbon monoxide. The methanol is separated and purified from any byproducts by, for example, distillation.

    (14) While the invention has been described in connection with what is presently considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiments but, on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims, which scope is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures as is permitted under the law.