hydrogen plant - normal operations

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Normal Operation of Steam Reformers on Hydrogen Plants By: Gerard B. Hawkins Managing Director, CEO

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Typical controlled variables Plant Data analysis Approach to equilibrium Prediction of remaining catalyst life Tube wall temperature measurement

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Page 1: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Normal Operation of Steam Reformers on Hydrogen

PlantsBy:

Gerard B. HawkinsManaging Director, CEO

Page 2: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Contents

Typical controlled variables Plant data analysis Approach to equilibrium Prediction of remaining catalyst life Tube wall temperature measurement

Page 3: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Typical Controlled Variables

Process gas exit temperature Process gas and steam inlet temperature Steam/carbon ratio Process pressure Furnace parameters

• Air preheat temperature• Excess air

Page 4: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Exit

Met

hane

Slip

(mol

% D

ry)

CatalystActivity

40%

200 %

Plant Rate

130%

80%

ExitPressure

-1 bar+1 bar

ExitTemp(oC)

-10-20

+20+10

SteamRatio

-10%-8%

+8%+10%

5

4

3

2

1

0

Reformer Optimization : Hydrogen Reformer(Top-Fired) Exit Temperature 856oC (1573oF)

Note relatively small changes in exittemperature or steam to carbon ratio can have significant effect on exit Methane slipCatalyst activity has relatively less impact

Page 5: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

CatalystActivity40%

60%

80%

150%200%

ExitTemp(oC)

+10-20

SteamRatio

+10%

-10%

ExitPressure

-1bar

+1bar

Plant Rate

120%

110%

90%80%

8

6

4

2

Met

hane

-Ste

am A

ppro

ach

Tem

pera

ture

(oC

)Reformer Optimization : Hydrogen Reformer(Top-Fired) Exit Temperature 856oC (1573oF)

Catalyst activity has relatively more impact on methane-steam approach to equilibrium temperature

Page 6: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Max

imum

Tub

e W

all

Tem

pera

ture

o C (o

F)

CatalystActivity40%

200%60%

Plant Rate

110%90%80%

120%

ExitTemp(oC)

-10

-20

+10

+20

SteamRatio

(Small effect)

890(1634)

880(1616)

870(1598)

860(1580)

850(1562)

ExitPressure

(Small effect)

Reformer Optimization : Hydrogen Reformer(Top-Fired) Exit Temperature 856oC (1573oF)

If exit temperature remains constant, then catalyst activity has relatively more impact on maximum tube wall temperatures

Page 7: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Monitoring Operations Furnace Inspection

• tube appearance• refractory condition

external hot-spots• burns

flame characteristics Steam reformer exit temperature measurement

• subheader/pigtail temp, measurements burner trimming

Feedstock purification performance sulfur/chlorides etc

Page 8: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Hot Band Hot Tube SettlingGiraffeNecking

TigerTailing

Reformer Tube Appearance

Page 9: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Contents

Typical controlled variables Plant data analysis Approach to equilibrium Prediction of remaining catalyst life Tube wall temperature measurement

Page 10: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Plant Data Analysis Important to cross-check measured data

• gas compositions inlet steam reformer exit steam reformer exit shift reactors(s)

• pressures/temperatures at these points• flowrates

recycle hydrogen hydrocarbon feedstocks steam (need also steam/BFW HTS feed

quench) fuel & air

Page 11: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Plant Data Analysis

Match measured plant data with heat/mass balance• if good match, then data accurate• if poor match, then errors in plant data

Total plant data computer fitting program• can use product rates and compositions etc for

cross-checking of data• can suggest likely sources of measurement error

Page 12: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Plant Data Analysis Total plant data fitting

• CO conversion across shift converter(s) temperature increase very accurate due to

multiple thermocouples cross-checks CO analysis AND steam rate

• Product rate/composition (methanator exit or PSA product and offgas) cross-checks feed rate, steam rate and

methane in reformer exit analysis• Methanator temperature rise

cross-checks CO slip from LTS and CO2 slip from CO2 removal system

Page 13: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Steam ReformerFeed flow (Nm3/hr)Steam flow (tonne/hr)Exit gas temperature (oC)Exit gas composition (mol % dry)

H2N2CH4COCO2

Exit gas flow (Nm3/hr)Steam : dry gas ratioEquilibrium temperature (oC)Approach to M/S equilb.(oC)Steam : carbon ratio

MeasuredValue1975

11.2750.0

65.27-

4.659.0221.05

7.009

Best FitValue2459

11.1765.0

71.370

3.238.6316.778634

1.1745755.59.5

5.575

PercentageError24.5

-1.11.4

-9.3-

30.54.320.3

Plant data Verification - Poor Fit

Page 14: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Plant Data Verification - Poor Fit

Poor fit Areas to check

• feed flowrate• exit methane• exit CO/CO2

Feed flowrate originally quoted as 1.156 tonne/hr naphtha- Revised to be 1.59 te/hr naphtha

Page 15: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Plant Data Verification - Revised Fit

Steam ReformerFeed flow (Nm3/hr)Steam flow (tonne/hr)Exit gas temperature (oC)Exit gas composition (mol % dry)

H2N2CH4COCO2

Exit gas flow (Nm3/hr)Steam : dry gas ratioEquilibrium temperature (oC)Approach to M/S equilb.(oC)Steam : carbon ratio

MeasuredValue2644

11.2750.0

65.27-

4.659.0221.05

5.244

Best FitValue2554

11.2758.0

71.330

3.238.6816.768954

1.1384758.1

05.442

PercentageError-3.4

0.30.8

-9.3-

30.43.820.4

Page 16: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Plant Data Verification - Revised Fit Better fit for flowrate Significant error still on reformer exit gas

analysis CH4

CO/CO2

Methane slip originally quoted as 4.65 mol %(dry)- Revised to 3.56 mol % (dry)

Page 17: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Plant Data Verification - Final Fit

Steam ReformerFeed flow (Nm3/hr)Steam flow (tonne/hr)Exit gas temperature (oC)Exit gas composition (mol % dry)

H2N2CH4COCO2

Exit gas flow (Nm3/hr)Steam : dry gas ratioEquilibrium temperature (oC)Approach to M/S equilb.(oC)Steam : carbon ratio

MeasuredValue2644

11.2750.0

69.86-

3.568.2418.34

5.244

Best FitValue2554

11.2758.0

71.330

3.238.6816.768954

1.1384758.1

05.442

PercentageError-3.4

0.30.8

-2.1-

9.45.38.6

Page 18: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Plant Data Measurement - Problem Areas

Sampling/analysing exit gas compositions Exit temperature from reformer Flow measurement

Page 19: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Exit Gas Composition

CO shift reaction can occur if not quench cooled quickly

CO2 may dissolve in water• dry gas analysis!

Analysis of sample must be taken in the same time frame as the process data recording

Page 20: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Exit Reforming Catalyst

(mol % dry)

"Shifted" SampleAnalysis

(mol % dry)CH4 4.4 4.2CO 13.8 10.3CO2 8.6 11.4H2 71.9 72.8N2 1.3 1.3

CO>CO2 CO<CO2

“Shifting” in Gas Sample

Note also reduction in CH4

Page 21: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Exit Temperature

Heat/mass balance requires temperature exit catalyst

Plant temperature measurement often at inlet to waste heat boiler• large heat losses possible

outlet pigtails, headers, transfer mains

Top-fired : 10-20oC (18-36oF) heat loss

Side-fired : 25-35oC (45-63oF) heat loss (Air ingress at base of steam reformer can lead to further cooling)

Page 22: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Note that hydrocarbon composition variationsmay effect the metered accuracy and also the

steam/carbon ratio calculation

Flow Measurement

Hydrocarbon feedstock generally high accuracy• “costing” meter• multiple feed streams may be less accurate

Steam flow often less accurate• error in steam/carbon ratio can have a

significant effect on heat/mass balance

Page 23: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Plant Data Analysis Best to record trends

• relative changes partially remove measurement errors

Monitor monthly/quarterly• measures of catalyst activity

methane slip assuming constant operating conditions

• approach to equilibrium• tube wall temperature

Page 24: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Plant Data Analysis

Page 25: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

00.5

11.5

22.5

33.5

44.5

5

0 10 20 30 40

Met

hane

Slip

(mol

%)

Months on line

Plant Data AnalysisN

atural Gas R

ate (x1000 N

m3/hr)8

6

4

2

Page 26: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Contents

Typical controlled variables Plant data analysis Approach to equilibrium Prediction of remaining catalyst life Tube wall temperature measurement

Page 27: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Approach Tms = Actual T gas - Equilibrium T gas (A.T.E.)

Measured Calculated

• Measure of catalyst activity• If ATE = O, system at equilibrium• As catalyst activity decreases, ATE increases

Approach to EquilibriumCH4 + H2O CO + 3H2⇔

Page 28: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Calculation of Approach to Equilibrium

1. Take gas samples and record steam reformer exit temperature

2. Calculate wet reformer exit composition- Hydrogen atom molar balance (inlet/exit)- Calculate steam in exit gas- Convert exit dry gas to wet gas composition

3. Calculate equilibrium temperaturecorresponding to this exit composition

- Use tables or equations4. Calculate approach to equilibrium

Page 29: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Contents

Typical controlled variables Plant data analysis Approach to equilibrium Prediction of remaining catalyst life Tube wall temperature measurement

Page 30: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Case Study

Terraced wall reformer How much longer will catalyst last (from

Jan’08) Change-out when?

• September ‘08• April ‘09• September ‘09

Page 31: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

11/Apr/06 03/Oct/06 27/Mar/07 18/Sep/07 12/Mar/08

1,320

1,340

1,360

1,380

1,400

1,420

6

7

8

9

10

Date

Met

hane

Slip

(m

Outlet Temperature Methane Slip

Steam Reformer Performance

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 32: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

10/Feb/04 22/Dec/05 02/Nov/05 12/Sep/06 24/Jul/07 04/Jun/080

Design EOR

Design SORCatalyst On- line: Oct ‘02

01/Apr/03

10

20

30

40

Date

App

roac

h to

Equ

ilibr

ium

(oF)

Catalyst Performance Monitoring

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 33: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

1,300

1,400

1,500

1,600

1,700

Date

01/Apr/05 26/May/06 20/Jul/07 12/Sep/08 06/Nov/09

Design temperature

Tube wall temperatures (Top)

Tube wall temperatures (Bottom)

Tube Wall TemperaturesTu

be W

all T

empe

ratu

re (o

F)

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 34: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8

1260

1360

1460

1560

Fraction down Tube (%)

Tube Wall Temperature Process Gas

Delta T

1

Tube Wall Temperatures

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 35: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Bottom minus Top

01/Apr/06 26/May/07 20/Jul/08 12/Sep/08 06/Nov/090

20

40

60

80100

120

140-9oF/year

Tube wall Temperatures

Date

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 36: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

June 06 June 07 June 08 Sep 08 Sep 09

Exit CH4 (mol% dry) 7 7 7 7 7

Exit Temp oC(oF)

787(1432)

789(1452)

795(1463)

795(1463)

795(1463)

Max Tube Temp oC(oF)

829(1524)

831(1528)

838(1540)

838(1540)

838(1540)

M/S Equilib. Approach oC(oF)

10(18)

12(22)

13(23)

14(25)

15(27)

Steam Reformer Data

Looks OK to September ‘09 BUT……..….

Page 37: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1500

600

700

800

900

Fraction from inlet of tube

Carbon Formation Catalyst ageing

New catalyst

Carbon Formation

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 38: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Activity Decay Factor Need to consider carbon formation

• Accurate model of catalyst activities needed to correctly simulate catalyst ageing

Take data at different times and calculate relative activity• for terraced wall reformer

(i) top 30% slowly poisoned (ii) middle 30% very slowly poisoned (iii) bottom 40% sinters very slowly

(i) and (ii) account for delta T(iii) accounts for increased approach

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 39: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Jan 02

May Sep Jan 03

May Sep Jan 04

May Sep Jan 05

May Sep0

50

100

150

200

250

Today September‘04

September‘05

Carbon margin

Date

Car

bon

Mar

gin

(oF)

Carbon Margin with Time

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 40: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Activity(arbitrary)

Time (years)

Carbon forming region

Initial sintering

"Stable" activity

Margin

Period where carbon can be formed at anytime due to variation in process conditions

Catalyst Deactivation (Schematic)

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 41: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Conclusions #1

In terms of M/S Approach and Tube Wall Temperatures, can run till September ‘05

Concern about carbon margin from April ‘05 onwards• options

change April ‘05 - CHOSEN OPTIONOR run with spare on site and change

September ‘05

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 42: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Conclusions #2

• Sometimes difficult for operator to predict change-out requirement– Couldn’t rely on M/S Equilibrium Approach

and Tube Wall Temperature trending– Needed complex reformer simulation

• HOWEVER, recording of historic data from start-of-run conditions allowed accurate assessment by the catalyst vendor– Take data from SOR!

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 43: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Contents

Typical controlled variables Plant data analysis Approach to equilibrium Prediction of remaining catalyst life Tube wall temperature measurement

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 44: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Importance of Tube Wall Temperature Measurement

Need accurate information• Tube life !• Artificial limitation on plant rate

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 45: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Tube

Life

(Yea

rs)

850(1560)

900(1650)

950(1740)

1000(1830)

0.10.2

0.5

1

2

5

1020

Design

Effect of Tube Wall Temperature on Tube Life

Temperature oC (oF)

+ 20oC+ 36oF

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 46: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Tube Wall Temperature Measurement

Contact• surface Thermocouple

“Pseudo-contact”• Gold Cup Pyrometer

Non-contact• disappearing filament• infra-red optical pyrometer• laser pyrometer

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 47: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Surface Thermocouples

Continuous measurement, by condution “Slotting” can weaken tube wall Spray-welding leads to high readings Short, unpredictable lives (6-12 months)

Not commonly used for steam reformer tubes

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 48: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Disappearing Filament Hand held instrument Tungsten filament superimposed on

image of target Current through filament altered until it

“disappears” Current calibrated to temperature Range 800-3000oC (1470 - 5430oF)

Very operator sensitiveLargely displaced by IR

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 49: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Infra-red Pyrometer

Easy to use Need to correct for

emissivity and reflected radiation

Inexpensive

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 50: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Radiation Methods

Measure emitted energy at given wavelength Use Planck’s Law to give temperature Correction factors needed

• target emissivity real versus black body

• reflected radiation

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 51: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Tw

"e" is the emissivity of the tube

Target TubeTt

Refractory Wall

MeasuredTemperature

Tm

Flame Tf

e

The Effect of Reflected Radiation from Target Surroundings

Page 52: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Measured True Averagedtarget target background

temperature temperature temperature

e = emissivityr = reflectance

= (1-e)

Temperature Correction

E (Tm) = e E (Tt) + r E (T’w)

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 53: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

0.7 0.75 0.8 0.85 0.9 0.95 1

Difference in wall and target temperature oC (oF)

300

200

100

Deg C Deg F(540 F)

(360 F)

(180 F)

200

150

100

50

0

392

302

212

122

0

Target Emissivity

Error in measured tube temperature

Theoretical Effect of Wall Temperature(0.9 micron pyrometer)

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 54: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Laser Pyrometers

Laser pulse fired at target and return signal detected

Can determine target emissivity Must correct for background radiation High speed selectivity Very accurate for flat surfaces

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 55: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

TUBE

Laser Pyrometer

Laser Pyrometer - Angle of IncidenceScattered laser pulse

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 56: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Gold Cup Pyrometer

Excludes all reflected radiation Approximates to black body conditions High accuracy/reproducibility But…..

• limited access• awkward to use

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 57: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

TubeFurnace Wall

WaterCooling

ToRecorder

Gold CupLance

*

Gold Cup Pyrometer

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 58: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Accurate Temperature Measurement

Combination of IR pyrometer and Gold Cup• Gold Cup allows us to calculate “e”• Full accurate survey of reformer

possible with IR

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 59: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

• Measure Tt using Gold Cup• Measure Tm and Tw using Infra Red Pyrometer• Calculate e

Calculate "e"Use IR to give Tt with measured T’w and Tm and calculated e

Accurate Temperature Measurement

E (Tm) = e E (Tt) + (1-e) E (T’w)

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 60: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

A

a (Nearby tubes)2

Background Temperature Measurement

Background Measurement for Tube A

a1

RefractoryWall

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 61: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

950

900

850

800

750

1742

1652

1562

1472

1382

Tem

pera

ture

(oC

)

Tem

pera

ture

(oF)

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1

UncorrectedPyrometer

Corrected Pyrometer

Calculated = Gold Cup Measurements

Fraction down tube

Comparison of IR pyrometer and Calculated Tube Wall Temperature

Measurements

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 62: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Tube Wall TemperatureMeasurement - Conclusions

IR typically reads high• top-fired reformer 32oC (58oF)• side-fired reformer 50oC (90oF)

IR with Gold Cup “calibration”• top-fired reformer 2oC (4oF)• side-fired reformer 16oC (29oF)

GBH Enterprises Ltd.

Page 63: Hydrogen Plant - Normal Operations

Summary Effect of operating variables on performance Plant data analysis

• fitting plant data• problem areas

reformer exit temperature flow errors sample analysis shifting

Approach to equilibrium Prediction of remaining catalyst life Tube wall temperature measurement

GBH Enterprises Ltd.