METHODS FOR PRODUCING OZONE

20170173514 ยท 2017-06-22

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    A method for producing ozone is disclosed. The ozone is separated by an adsorbent separation system from a mixture of oxygen and ozone. The adsorbent separation system operates by adsorbing ozone at higher pressures, then desorbing the ozone at normal pressures. Increased ozone concentrations result from these steps while the oxygen component can be recovered and used in producing the mixture of oxygen and ozone.

    Claims

    1. A method for producing ozone from an oxygen and ozone mixture comprising the steps of adsorbing ozone in an adsorbent separation system at higher pressures and desorbing ozone at normal pressures.

    2. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the oxygen and ozone mixture is produced in an ozone generator.

    3. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the ozone is present in the oxygen and ozone mixture in amounts ranging from 3% to 15%.

    4. The method as claimed in claim 3 wherein the ozone is present in the oxygen and ozone mixture in amounts ranging from 6% to 12%.

    5. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the adsorbent separation system is a pressure swing adsorption system.

    6. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein higher pressures are at least 50% higher than normal pressures.

    7. The method as claimed in claim 6 wherein the higher pressures are 100% to 1000% higher than normal pressures.

    8. The method as claimed in claim 7 wherein the higher pressures are 150% to 500% higher than normal pressures.

    9. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein higher pressures are pressures greater than 1 atmosphere.

    10. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein higher pressures are pressures greater than 2 atmospheres.

    11. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein normal pressures are 1.2 bara.

    12. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein oxygen is recovered from the adsorbent separation system.

    13. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein a desorption gas is used to mix and transport the adsorbed ozone from an adsorption bed.

    14. The method as claimed in claim 12 wherein the oxygen recovered from the adsorbent separation system is recycled to the ozone generator.

    15. An improved method for separating ozone from an oxygen and ozone mixture in an adsorbent separation system, the improvement comprising the steps of adsorbing ozone at higher pressures and then desorbing ozone at normal pressures.

    16. The method as claimed in claim 15 wherein the oxygen and ozone mixture is produced in an ozone generator.

    17. The method as claimed in claim 15 wherein the ozone is present in the oxygen and ozone mixture in amounts ranging from 3% to 15%.

    18. The method as claimed in claim 17 wherein the ozone is present in the oxygen and ozone mixture in amounts ranging from 6% to 12%.

    19. The method as claimed in claim 15 wherein the adsorbent separation system is a pressure swing adsorption system.

    20. The method as claimed in claim 15 wherein higher pressures are at least 50% higher than normal pressures.

    21. The method as claimed in claim 20 wherein the higher pressures are 100% to 1000% higher than normal pressures.

    22. The method as claimed in claim 21 wherein the higher pressures are 150% to 500% higher than normal pressures.

    23. The method as claimed in claim 15 wherein higher pressures are pressures greater than 1 atmosphere.

    24. The method as claimed in claim 15 wherein higher pressures are pressures greater than 2 atmospheres.

    25. The method as claimed in claim 15 wherein normal pressures are 1.2 bara.

    26. The method as claimed in claim 15 wherein oxygen is recovered from the adsorbent separation system.

    27. The method as claimed in claim 26 wherein the oxygen recovered from the adsorbent separation system is recycled to the ozone generator.

    Description

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

    [0019] In multi-gas adsorption systems, the concentration of the adsorbed gas is limited by the partial pressure of that gas during adsorption. For example, ozone adsorbed at atmospheric pressure (1 Atma) at a concentration of 6% is limited to a maximum partial pressure of 0.06 Atma (0.061 Atma).

    [0020] In a second example, ozone produced at a concentration of 6% is adsorbed at a pressure of 2 Atma. In this case, the maximum ozone partial pressure during adsorption is doubled to 0.12 atm for the same 6% inlet concentration. The vapor pressure of any component in a multi-gas mixture is determined by multiplying the concentration (i.e., 0.06) by the total pressure (i.e., 2 Atm).

    [0021] The benefit of higher pressure adsorption is realized following desorption which is always at a lower pressure. Following from the example above, pressure is reduced to 1 Atma during desorption; however, the partial pressure of the adsorbed ozone remains the same, 0.12 Atma. At the reduced pressure, the partial pressure of the ozone at the reduced pressure results in an effective ozone concentration of 12% or double the inlet concentration.

    [0022] It can be seen from these examples that a benefit is derived from exploiting the effect of higher pressure adsorption. In the example above, the obvious benefit is the ability to increase the concentration of an adsorbed gas by proportionally increasing the feed pressure.

    [0023] However, ozone generators are designed to produce ozone in a wide range of concentrations typically up to 12%.

    [0024] It is not obvious from the above examples that an additional benefit can be derived through higher pressure adsorption. As discussed above, the specific power required to produce ozone is a function of its concentration. From this, it is easy to conclude that there is an economic benefit derived from producing ozone at the ozone generator at lower concentrations. The unit cost to produce a kilogram of ozone is heavily influenced by the concentration of ozone that is being produced.

    [0025] The present invention enables one to produce ozone at lower concentration, hence at lower cost, then increase the concentration at the adsorption system by manipulating the adsorption/desorption pressures by way of the pressure swing. An earlier process employs an adsorption system where the adsorbent preferentially adsorbs ozone; allowing oxygen to pass through to be recovered for re-use. The benefit of this technology is primarily to reduce the cost to produce ozone by reducing the total oxygen requirement by re-using recovered oxygen. For this purpose, the pressure swing offers no real benefit. Ozone adsorbed in the adsorption bed can be recovered through a desorption step wherein a desorption gas; for example clean dry air, nitrogen or another weakly adsorbed gas is introduced into the adsorption bed and allowed to mix with the adsorbed ozone and transported from the adsorption bed as the desorption gas exits from the adsorption bed. Ozone mixes with the desorption gas by means of diffusion where the difference in partial pressure between the ozone in equilibrium with the adsorbed ozone and that of ozone in the desorption gas is the driving force.

    [0026] However, by increasing the pressure swing and the resultant ozone concentration, the specific power cost to produce ozone will be reduced.

    [0027] Oxygen supply systems, including cylinders, bulk storage tanks and pressure adsorption generators typically produce oxygen with pressures exceeding 2 Atm. (Vacuum swing adsorption systems often require the use on an oxygen blower to achieve the pressure required by a customer process as their oxygen product pressure may be only about 1.6 bar). They more typically produce oxygen at pressures exceeding 5 Atma. It is therefore not necessary to add equipment such as compressors nor is it necessary to consume the associated power required to increase the pressure of oxygen at a facility producing ozone. The oxygen pressure determines the limits for the ozone pressure in ozone producing equipment.

    [0028] The oxygen source provides adequate pressure to exploit the benefits of a higher pressure swing cycle.

    [0029] This invention therefore provides for the production of ozone at a given concentration utilizing a lower specific power. This will result in power savings ranging from 30 to 70% based on the power/concentration performance for generally available ozone generators.

    [0030] Optionally, the invention can also combine these power-saving benefits with the ability to recover and re-use oxygen from the oxygen and ozone gas mixture produced by ozone generators.

    [0031] The ozone mixture will be safer than conventional ozone produced without benefit of the adsorption technology because most of the oxygen in the gas mixture is displaced when air or another inert gas is used to purge the ozone from the adsorption bed as the concentration of oxygen in the mixture is reduced.

    [0032] Further, the ability to produce ozone at higher and safer concentrations increases the effectiveness of ozone gas mixtures because the higher partial pressure provides a stronger driving force for reactions.

    [0033] While this invention has been described with respect to particular embodiments thereof, it is apparent that numerous other forms and modifications of the invention will be obvious to those skilled in the art. The appended claims in this invention generally should be construed to cover all such obvious forms and modifications which are within the true spirit and scope of the invention.