CO-PRODUCTION OF METHANOL, AMMONIA AND UREA
20230073089 · 2023-03-09
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C01B3/025
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02P30/00
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
C01B3/382
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C07C29/1518
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01C1/0488
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01B2203/0233
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01B2203/0283
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
Abstract
Sequential and once-through (single pass) process for the co-production of methanol and ammonia and conversion of at least a part of ammonia to urea by reaction of the ammonia with carbon dioxide collected from a primary reformer flue gas together with carbon dioxide separated from reformed gas in a carbon dioxide removal stage.
Claims
1. Process for co-producing methanol, ammonia and urea from a hydrocarbon feedstock, the process comprising the steps of a) primary and secondary steam reforming of a hydrocarbon feedstock, and obtaining a steam reformed effluent comprising hydrogen, nitrogen, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide; b) passing a part of the steam reformed effluent from step (a) to a carbon dioxide removal stage to produce an effluent with a reduced content of carbon dioxide; c) by-passing the carbon dioxide removal stage with the remaining part of the steam reformed effluent and combining the effluent withdrawn from step (b) with the by-passed part of the steam reformed effluent to provide a methanol synthesis gas comprising hydrogen, nitrogen and carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide; d) adding hydrogen recovered from a downstream ammonia synthesis stage to the methanol synthesis gas obtained in step (c); e) catalytically converting the methanol synthesis gas in a once-through methanol synthesis step and withdrawing a liquid effluent comprising methanol and a gas effluent comprising nitrogen and hydrogen; f) catalytically converting the gas effluent withdrawn in step (e) to ammonia in the ammonia synthesis stage; and g) converting at least a part of the ammonia rom step (e) to urea by reaction with carbon dioxide removed in step (b) together with carbon dioxide contained in flue gas recovered from the primary steam reforming in step (a).
2. The process of claim 1, comprising the further step of subjecting the steam reformed effluent from step (a) to a water gas shift reaction.
3. The process of claim 1, comprising the further step of subjecting the gas effluent from step (d) to a methanation reaction upstream step (e).
4. The process of claim 1, wherein the amount of hydrogen added to the methanol synthesis gas in step (d) is adjusted to provide a module M between 2.5 and 10.
5. The process of claim 1, wherein the once-through methanol synthesis step is performed in parallel methanol production lines.
Description
[0018] In an embodiment, the amount of hydrogen in the reformed effluent can be further adjusted by means of the water gas shift reaction.
[0019] Preferably, the amount of hydrogen added to the methanol synthesis gas in step (d) is adjusted to provide a module M is at least 2.5, such as between 2.5 and 10.
[0020] In the present invention, carbon dioxide generated in in the burners is advantageously utilized in the preparation of urea, which decreases the carbon dioxide foot print of the process.
[0021] The amount of carbon dioxide recovered from the burner flue gas and from the carbon dioxide removal stage is adjusted to the desired production of urea.
[0022] The above measures allow flexible production of methanol, ammonia and urea depending on the actual demand of the producer.
[0023] The process of the invention makes direct use of the reactions governing reforming, methanol synthesis and ammonia synthesis so that methanol and ammonia can be co-produced without venting large amounts of carbon dioxide being captured from the synthesis gas. The carbon oxides from the process can be fully utilized for methanol and urea production
[0024] Removal of the part of the carbon dioxide contained in the steam reformed effluent is typically obtained by means of highly expensive CO2-removal stages in the form of acid gas wash, such as conventional MDEA and carbonate wash processes.
[0025] Thus, a further advantage of the invention is the reduction of the amount of carbon dioxide to be removed, when by-passing a part of the steam reformed effluent the removal stage.
[0026] The process may comprise further parallel methanol processes. I.e. one or more additional methanol processes may be worked in the parallel in the methanol synthesis step of the process of the invention. The parallel one, two, three or more parallel methanol processes may be interconnected by one or more synthesis gas line.
[0027] Thus, in an embodiment of the invention the once-through methanol synthesis step is performed in parallel methanol production lines.
[0028] As used herein, the term “once-through methanol synthesis stage” means that methanol is produced in at least one catalytic reactor operating in a single pass configuration, i.e. without significant recirculation (not more than 5%, i.e. less than 5%, often 0%) of the volume flow of any gas produced in the methanol synthesis back to the at least one methanol reactor of the methanol synthesis stage, particularly the gas effluent containing hydrogen and unconverted carbon oxides.
[0029] The process of the present invention is environmentally friendly because there are no emissions to the surroundings of the CO.sub.2 captured from the methanol and ammonia synthesis gas. Practically all carbon monoxide (and carbon dioxide) produced in the process is used for methanol synthesis and the urea synthesis.
[0030] The methanol synthesis stage is preferably conducted by conventional means by passing the synthesis gas at high pressure and temperatures, such as 60-150 bars, preferably 120 bars and 150-300° C. through at least one methanol reactor containing at least one fixed bed of methanol catalyst. A particularly preferred methanol reactor is a fixed bed reactor cooled by a suitable cooling agent such as boiling water, e.g. boiling water reactor (BWR).
[0031] In a specific embodiment the methanol synthesis stage in step (e) is conducted by passing the synthesis gas through one boiling water reactor and subsequently through an adiabatic fixed bed reactor, or by passing the synthesis gas through a series of boiling water reactors and subsequently through an adiabatic fixed bed reactor.
[0032] Since the methanol synthesis stage is once-through, there is no need for recirculation of a part of the overhead fraction from the separator of the adiabatic fixed bed reactor back to the first methanol reactor of the methanol synthesis stage.
[0033] When the amount of carbon monoxide in the gas effluent from the methanol synthesis step in step (e) exceeds the amount, which is acceptable for use in the ammonia synthesis stage, the effluent is passed through a methanation step in order to remove carbon monoxide by reaction to methane.
[0034] Thus, in an embodiment of the invention, the process comprises the further step of subjecting the gas effluent from step (d) to a methanation reaction upstream step (e).
[0035] In step (e) the ammonia synthesis gas optionally from the methanation step containing the right proportion of hydrogen and nitrogen (preferably H.sub.2:N.sub.2 molar ratio of 3:1) is optionally passed through a compressor to obtain the required ammonia synthesis pressure, such as 120 to 200 bar, preferably about 130 bar. Ammonia is then produced in a conventional manner by means of an ammonia synthesis loop. The effluent containing ammonia contains also hydrogen, nitrogen and inerts such as methane and argon. Ammonia may be recovered from the effluent containing ammonia as liquid ammonia by condensation and subsequent separation. Preferably, an off-gas stream containing hydrogen, nitrogen and methane is withdrawn from the ammonia synthesis stage, as also is a hydrogen-rich stream (>90 vol % H.sub.2). These streams may for instance stem from a purge gas recovery unit. This hydrogen stream is added to the methanol synthesis stage, for instance by combining with the methanol synthesis gas. The recycle of this hydrogen-rich stream enables a higher efficiency in the process as useful hydrogen is utilised in the methanol synthesis and subsequent ammonia synthesis rather than simply being used as fuel.