microwave cracking of ethane for ethylene production

23
Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production Morgana Fall, Frank Cabe, Holly Shulman Ceralink Inc. Troy, New York Eric Wagner, Gary Eagleson, Ravi Lal Technip Claremont, California Presented at the 24 th Annual Ethylene Producers Conference April 3 rd , 2012 Houston, TX

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Page 1: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Microwave Cracking of Ethane

for Ethylene Production

Morgana Fall, Frank Cabe, Holly Shulman

Ceralink Inc.

Troy, New York

Eric Wagner, Gary Eagleson, Ravi Lal

Technip

Claremont, California

Presented at the 24th Annual Ethylene Producers Conference

April 3rd, 2012

Houston, TX

Page 2: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Outline

Background

Experimental Conditions

Results and Discussion

Summary

Acknowledgments

Page 3: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Ceralink Overview Troy, New York

Engineering Laboratories Advanced Materials Laboratory

Materials Testing Services

Microwave Technology Center (MTC)

Materials Engineering Services

Process Development & Scale-up

Specialized Equipment Building

Materials Analysis

Manufacturing Consulting

Technology Commercialization

Commercial and Government Projects

Technip Participated in the Lab Work

& Performed the SPYRO Modeling

Page 4: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Microwave Process

Ethane + Ar travel through 10mm inner diam quartz tube

Pass through hot zone: 6.4 mm thick surfa-guide

Microwave energy heats thin carbon film

hot enough to crack ethane (750-1150 °C range)

Control temperature through power application

Static

Mixer Mass Flow

Controllers

Ar

C2H6

Quartz

Tube

Gas

Chromatograph

Injection

Port

Exhaust Microwave equipment

Page 5: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Thermal Cracking of Ethane

6.3mm –tall hot zone

• Orange glow within surfa-guide

• Localized hot zone

• Carbon deposited inside quartz tube

• Microwave heats carbon

Hot zone

Page 6: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Experimental Conditions

Ethane Feed Rate

25 - 100 SCCM

Argon Feed Rate

10 - 100 SCCM

Pressure

Function of Feed Rate: 15 – 55 Torr

Higher Pressure Operation Possible in Principle

Temperature

Estimated to be in the range 1000 – 1100 °C

Page 7: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Measured Yields

TCD Gas Chromatograph

Detected Components:

H2, CH4, C2H2, C2H4, C2H6

Low Ethane Conversions

H/C of Measured Effluent 3.0 – 3.1

Limited Byproduct Formation (Feed H/C = 3.0)

High Ethane Conversions

H/C of Measured Effluent: 3.2 – 3.3

Expect Mostly Formation of C3H6 (from SPYRO)

Page 8: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Experimental Data

2.9

3

3.1

3.2

3.3

3.4

3.5

3.6

0 20 40 60 80 100

Me

asu

red

H/C

in E

fflu

en

t

Ethane Conversion

Gas Chromatography Measured H/C of Effluent

Page 9: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

SPYRO ® Yield Simulations

Normally used for Industrial Operations

ISO Extension Allows Laboratory Simulations

No Reactor Geometry Specified

Inputs

Flow and Composition of Ethane and Argon

Outlet Pressure as Measured: 15 – 55 torr

Residence Time (Vacuum) ~ 0.001 Seconds

Isothermal Temperature

Varied to Match Measured Ethane Conversion

Page 10: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Results and Discussion

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

800 850 900 950 1000 1050 1100 1150 1200

Eth

ane

Co

nve

rsio

n

Temperature (oC)

SPYRO® Predicted Ethane Conversion at 42 Torr and 0.001 Seconds Residence Time

Page 11: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

SPYRO® Simulations

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

0 20 40 60 80 100

Yie

ld (

wt%

)

Ethane Conversion

SPYRO® Predicted Ethylene Yield at 42 Torr and 0.001 Seconds Residence Time

YC2H4

Page 12: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

SPYRO® Simulations

0

5

10

15

20

25

0 20 40 60 80 100

Yie

ld (

wt%

)

Ethane Conversion

SPYRO® Predicted Yields at 42 Torr and 0.001 Seconds Residence Time

YH2

YCH4

YC2H2

Page 13: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

SPYRO Yields – Normalize SPYRO SPYRO Lab

Component Full Norm C2 Data H2 3.6 3.8 5.6

CH4 6.6 6.9 4.5 C2H2 1.5 1.6 1.9 C2H4 47.5 49.8 50.0 C2H6 36.3 38.0 38.0

Subtotal C2- 95.4 100.0 100.0

MAPD 0.2 - - C3H6 3.5 - - C3H8 0.1 - - C4's 0.7 - - C5+ 0.1 - -

Subtotal C3+ 4.6 0.0 0.0

Total 100.0 100.0 100.0

Page 14: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Experimental Results

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

0 20 40 60 80 100

Hyd

roge

n Y

ield

(w

t%)

Ethane Conversion

Comparison of SPYRO® Predicted and Measured Hydrogen (H2) Yield

SPYRO

LAB H2

Page 15: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Experimental Results

0

5

10

15

20

25

0 20 40 60 80 100

Met

han

e Y

ield

(w

t%)

Ethane Conversion

Comparison of SPYRO® Predicted and Measured Methane (CH4) Yield

SPYRO

LAB CH4

Page 16: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Experimental Results

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

0 20 40 60 80 100

Ace

tyle

ne

Yie

ld (

wt%

)

Ethane Conversion

Comparison of SPYRO® Predicted and Measured Acetylene (C2H2) Yield

SPYRO

LAB C2H2

Page 17: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Experimental Results

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

0 20 40 60 80 100

Eth

yle

ne

Yie

ld (

wt%

)

Ethane Conversion

Comparison of SPYRO® Predicted and Measured Ethylene (C2H4) Yield

SPYRO

LAB C2H4

Page 18: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Discussion

Data in Good Agreement with SPYRO®

Use SPYRO to Predict Industrial Performance

Microwave Energy Input

Microwaves Supply Heat Only

Neither Helps nor Hinders Pyrolysis

Apply Microwaves to Conventional Conditions

Pressure ~ 2 bar abs

Coil Outlet Temperature (COT) ~ 850 °C

Expect Yields to be Similar to Conventional Cracking

Page 19: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Industrial Design

Conventional Process

Burn Fuel to Create Temperature Driving Force

If COT ~ 850 °C, Tbridgewall ~ 1180 °C

Excess Energy Recovered From Fluegas

Feed Preheating

Byproduct Steam Production

Microwave Process

Burn Fuel to Create Electricity to Make Microwaves

No Combustion of Fuel (Locally)

No Temperature Driving Force Required

Only Supply Heat of Reaction

Page 20: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Example: 100 MWth Reactor Duty

Conventional Process - Combustion

Burn Fuel ~ 240 MWth LHV Basis in Furnace

Steam ~ 61 MWth Transferred to Export Steam

Microwave Conversion from Electricity

~ 71% Efficiency In Magnetron

~ 45% Efficiency At Power Plant LHV Basis

Fuel Burned at Power Plant ~ 313 MWth LHV

Limited Steam Produced at Reactor

Page 21: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Summary

Microwave Cracking Demonstrated

Cracking of ethane CH4, C2H2, C2H4,

Similar conversion selectivity compared to SPYRO

Short residence time (~0.001 sec)

The Microwave Cracking Process

Possibility of selectively heating reaction volume

May allow novel reactor designs

Page 22: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Future Work

Continued Testing Will be Required:

Experiments at Elevated Pressure

Steam as Dilution Gas Instead of Argon

GC Analysis to Include C3+

Apply Concept to Industrial Design Improve Heat Balance

Microwave Produces Little Byproduct Steam

Smaller “Furnace” footprint

Reactor Design – Different Constraints

Higher Throughput Per Reactor Tube

Reactor Tube Material Considerations

Page 23: Microwave Cracking of Ethane for Ethylene Production

Acknowledgments

This material is based upon work supported by the

Department of Energy under Award Number

DE-EE0003469.

Thanks to Dr. James Carnahan of Edison Laboratories

Special thanks to Eric Wagner and Gary Eagleson of

Technip USA, Inc. in Claremont, California