[0001] The gas which is produced in coal-distilling plants contains - when flowing out of
the distilling banks - steam, tar, naphthalene, anthracene oils, ammonia, raw benzol,
hydrogen sulphide, and traces of other chemicals.
[0002] Some of these substances are recovered from said gas as by-products suitable for
usage and, therefore, for sale. Tar, naphthalene and ammonia must be removed from
said gas because, when cooled in the distribution piping, these substances will condense
together with steam and cause serious fouling and corrosion problems within said piping
networks. In the past, these substances were removed from the gas to be used as by-products,
but nowadays they are manufactured through other, more economical processes; therefore,
their removal from said gas is effected, substantially, to solve the problems mentioned
above.
[0003] For this purpose, gas flowing out of the distilling banks is passed through a succession
of apparatuses designed to remove both recoverable and undesired substances from said
gas.
[0004] Gas flowing out of each distilling oven is conveyed into a header or manifold where
the gas from all the banks is collected. In the downflow end portion of the pipes
conveying the gas from said ovens to said header, water is sprayed to lower the temperature
of the gas to 80-85°C. The condensation is thus obtained of steam, of most tar and
anthracene oils, and of a small fraction of naphthalene, which will collect in the
header together with said gas. Naphthalene is absorbed by dissolving it in the tar
and anthracene oils.
[0005] Gas, water, tar and anthracene oils flow together out of said header and are conveyed
through a suitable piping to a separator to separate said gas therefrom. Water, tar
and anthracene oils, after separation from said gas, are conveyed to a decanter where
said tar and anthracene oils will settle down onto the bottom to be then removed,
and water is re-cycled.
[0006] The gas passing beyond said separator still contains all the by-products mentioned
above, including the fractions of tar, anthracene oils and naphthalene that have not
condensed during said cooling step.
[0007] In the immediately successive step, the gas is purified by removal of the remaining
tar and naphthalene therefrom.
[0008] In the heretofore known plants, this fraction of naphthalene is removed together
with all the remaining tar. For this purpose, said gas is scrubbed in water-cooling
towers, where it is cooled to a temperature of 25 to 35°C, thus obtaining the complete
condensation of tar and of a fraction of naphthalene that has been dissolved in said
tar. Tar is then separated from the water in a suitable decanter. The remaining naphthalene
is then removed from the gas in a scrubbing plant by means of suitable solvents, usually
anthracene oils or automotive diesel oil. If anthracene oils are used, an oil-regenerating
system is required, since said oils are quite expensive. The use of diesel oil requires
no regenerating system, since it may be used as a fuel because the naphthalene therein
causes no combustion trouble. However, the use of diesel oil as a fuel involves an
increase of costs in the combustion systems, because it is substituted form the less
expensive coke-oven gas.
[0009] The plant of the present invention, in addition to the cooling and de-humidification
of said gas, and to the complete removal of tar therefrom, enables the elimination
of naphthalene from said gas with no need of solvents, such as oils or diesel oil,
with resulting economy due to the lower capital and running costs - in that no regeneration
of said oils is required and diesel oil need not be substituted for the less expensive
coke-oven gas - and to the lower maintenance costs.
[0010] In the plant according to the invention, the gas flowing out of said header and having
a temperature of 80-85°C is scrubbed and cooled by means of atomized water in a cooler
wherein the scrubbing water has a temperature slightly above 0°C, usually about 10°C.
The gas, passing through the cooler in countercurrent, i.e. from the bottom upwards,
contacts said cooling water - which is atomized into very fine droplets and, therefore,
has a very large heat-exchange surface - and is cooled thereby so as to give off its
steam in excess at that temperature (said steam being then condensed), its residual
tar, and the vapors of the aromatic hydrocarbons therein, mainly naphthalene, which
will be also condensed due to said low temperature.
[0011] The gas flowing out of the top of the cooler, may still contain residual droplets
of water, particles of tar and naphthalene either incorporated or not in said droplets
of water and to be removed in a successive cyclone separator or any other suitable
separator, such as electrostatic filters, Venturi tubes, etc. Upon exiting from these
devices, said gas is thoroughly devoid of tar and only contains the amount of gaseous
naphthalene to saturate said gas at its post-cooling temperature. Thereafter, said
gas is passed through the successive purifying and processing systems, just like in
the conventional plants.
[0012] The scrubbing water flowing out of the cooling system contains a much higher rate
of naphthalene than the water flowing out of the known plants, due to the lower cooling
temperature, which has caused a much higher condensation of naphthalene.
[0013] Therefore, the problem of removing naphthalene for the scrubbing water is more serious
than in the known plants. In the latter, naphthalene is absorbed by tar during the
intimate contact therebetween and due to the solubility of naphthalene in tar and
to the small amount which is found dissolved in the latter, usually about 5%. In the
plant of the present invention, the amount of naphthalene to be eliminated is much
higher due to the lower cooling temperatures of gas; therefore, special and new provisions
have been used therein to enhance the contact between tar and naphthalene, whereby
the latter may be absorbed thouroughly by dissolution in the tar.
[0014] For this purpose, the scrubbing water exiting from the cooler is conveyed into a
flotation and decantation tank, where the materials lighter than water - such as naphthalene
flakes and foams, light oils, etc. - will float, and the heavier materials - such
as tar, anthracene oils, etc. - will settle down.
[0015] It is to be noted that the latter materials have already absorbed a fraction of naphthalene
in the cooler, in the piping to the tank and in the tank itself, due to the intimate
contact between naphthalene and tar therein.
[0016] The floating materials including naphthalene, are removed by suction from the surface
of the scrubbing water in the tank, and the settled materials, mostly tar, are sucked
from the bottom. Both of them, once sucked away, together with some of the water,
are conveyed into a single piping where they are mixed into intimate contact with
each other, which is enhanced by the turbulence caused by the pumping devices and
the speed of the fluid, which is purposely maintained at suitable values.
[0017] Therefore, the tar will absorb the naphthalene during the travel thereof through
said piping, the latter having such a length whereby almost all the free naphthalene
will be absorbed at the outlet thereof.
[0018] Said piping then discharges water and tar, that has absorbed most of the naphthalene,
into the decanter which also receives the water deprived of gas in the separator following
said header, the absorption of the still free residual naphthalene by the tar being
continued in said decanter. The tar is then allowed to settle down in said decanter
and is discharged, while the water, now devoid of tar and naphthalene, is re-cycled.
[0019] A small fraction of the water reaching the decantation and flotation tank from the
cooler and separator, as described above, is sucked together with the materials either
floating on the surface and settled on the bottom, while the remaining water is discharged
through a piping arranged at about an intermediate level of the decantation and flotation
tank. Such water contains small particles of naphthalene which have not yet reached
the surface owing to their small buoyancy resulting from their very small dimensions.
Such water is conveyed to said header and introduced at the bottom thereof, where
it mixes with the water being sprayed for the first cooling of the gas and with the
water that condenses therein, which is rich of tar having a low content of naphthalene
because the latter, due to the high temperature therein, has only condensed to a miximum
extent. Therefore, naphthalene will be dissolved easily and completely in the tar
it contacts within said header and successively within the following piping, within
the separator and finally in the tar decanter.
[0020] The summation of the absorbing actions of tar in the several sections of the plant
in the manner described above ensures the complete removal of naphthalene from the
ammoniacal cooling water; at the same time, the gas flowing out of the cyclone arranged
downstream of the cooler is completely devoid of tar and it only contains the amount
of naphthalene determined by the saturation of the gas at the temperature it has been
cooled, in a percentage which is completely satisfactory as far as the cleanness of
the distribution network is concerned.
[0021] The degree of purification of gas from naphthalene depends upon the average temperature
of said gas in the piping of the distribution network, because said temperature controls
its condensation to the dew point thereof, with attendant fouling and clogging problems.
In the countries where the ambient temperature is higher, higher percentages of naphthalene
in the gas may be tolerated than in colder countries. This affects the selection of
the various cooling temperatures for the gas, and of all the parameters affecting
the greater or smaller extent of contact between tar and naphthalene such as to avoid
any condensation within the gas distribution piping. These parameters may be varied
in the same plant, from time to time, depending on the ambient temperatures, thus
saving energy when the ambient temperature permits a higher concentration of naphthalene
in the gas.
[0022] The naphthalene that has been removed from the gas is incorporated in the tar, and
the latter may be used with no purification, for example, as a fuel. Should a purification
of the tar be required for other utilizations, no additional costs are involved with
respect to the known plants, because the tar produced in the latter also contains
a percentage of naphthalene, usually about 5% as stated above, and the higher concentration
thereof in the tar produced in the plant of the invention requires no particular plants
and processes.
[0023] With the plant according to the invention, the recovery of naphthalene, if desired,
has a lower cost than with the purification systems heretofore known, because the
entire recovery would be effected by distillation of only the tar.
[0024] With reference to the drawings, an embodiment of the invention will be described
as an illustrating and not-limiting example.
[0025] The gas flows out of the banks of coke-ovens, only one of which is shown in the drawing
for simplicity's sake and is indicated at 1, and is conveyed to the header 3 through
the piping 2. In the end portion of the piping 2 adjacent said header, suitable water
sprays will lower the temperature of the gas to 80-85°C. Due to this cooling action,
the excess steam in the gas flowing out of said bank is condensed and will collect
into the bottom 4 of the header 3 together with the water that has been used for cooling
purposes.
[0026] Said cooling of the gas will cause as well the condensation of most the tar, which
will also settle down to the bottom of the header 3, and of a small fraction of naphthalene
that will be absorbed by the tar.
[0027] Water, tar and gas will be conveyed into a piping 5 to reach a water-gas separator
6 where the gas is separated from the tar-containing water.
[0028] The gas pursues its travel in the piping 7, and water and tar are conveyed through
the piping 8 into a decanter 9, where the tar will settle down onto the bottom due
to its greater specific gravity with respect to water. The tar on the bottom of the
decanter is discharged through a pipin 10 and is recovered.
[0029] The gas passing through the piping 7, deprived of most tar and at a temperature of
80-85°C, enters the lower portion of a spray-cooler 11. It moves upwards through the
entire tower cooler 11 and is discharged from the top thereof through the piping 12.
[0030] Within the tower cooler, cold water is sprayed in a finely atomized condition. The
gas moving upwards in countercurrent with the finely atomized droplets falling down
by gravity meets a first set of spray nozzles 13 for atomizing water usually at about
25-30°C which is cooled, for example, by means of sea water through heat-exchangers
14, and thereafter a second set of spray nozzles 15 for atomizing water at a temperature
of 2-10°C which is cooled, for example, by means of refrigerating units 16.
[0031] The gas in the cooler 11 is cooled to a temperature which is a few degrees above
the temperature of the cooling water, such as to 15°C if the temperature of the water
is 10°C. During this cooling step, all the tar and most of the naphthalene are condensed.
Tar and naphthalene, swept down by the water, fall down onto the bottom of the tower
together with the cooling water and the condensate of steam still contained in the
gas, excepted those very fine particles that may be swept along by said gas. This
gas is then conveyed to the droplet remover 17 where it is deprived of those particles.
[0032] The refrigerating unit for the final cooling of the gas in the tower is regulated
so as to minimize the energy consumption. If the gas is cooled to the temperature
of 15°C, the amount of gaseous naphthalene in the gas is 0.25 g/Nm3, which amount
generally causes no fouling problem in the pipes even if the temperature of the gas
flowing through the network falls some degrees below said temperature. If the average
temperatures in the pipes are above 15°C, the gas need not be cooled to said temperature,
since naphthalene will not condense at all. Said possibility of regulating this unit
allows a remarkable saving either of electric power required for operating the refrigerating
unit if the latter is of the compression type, or of vapor if it is of the absorption
type.
[0033] The water that collects on the bottom of the cooler 11 is conveyed through the piping
17 into a decantation-flotation tank 18, where the water that is captured in the cyclone
17 is also conveyed through the piping 19.
[0034] In the decantation-flotation tank 18, the materials lighter than water, such as naphthalene
flakes and foams, will float and the heavier materials, such as tar and anthracene
oils, will settle onto the bottom. The floating materials are removed from the surface
through the piping 20, and the settled materials are removed from the bottom through
the piping 21.
[0035] The two pipings 20 and 21 lead to a single piping 22 which conveys to the decanter
9 the mixture of tar, naphthalene and water being sucked together.
[0036] During the travel from the decantation-flotation tank 18 to the decanter 9, tar and
naphthalene are closely in contact with each other, which is enhanced by the turbulence
caused by the pump 30 and the speed of the fluid in the piping, said speed being maintained
at suitable values. The length of the piping 22, moreover, is such as to permit a
nearly complete absorption of naphthalene into the tar. It is to be noted that, partially,
such an absorption has occurred in the tower, during the cooling step, in the cyclone,
in the piping conveying the fluids into the decanter, and said absorption is completed
in said decanter.
[0037] The ammoniacal water being removed from the surface in the decanter 9, therefore,
is devoid of tar, which has all settled down onto the bottom, and of naphthalene,
which has been completely absorbed by the tar.
[0038] Said water is re-cycled, and a fraction of it will be used for the first cooling
step in the header, to which it is conveyed through the pipings 23, 24 and from which
it resumes the cycle described above. The remaining fraction of the water from the
decanter 9 is conveyed to the cooling tower through the piping 26. It is first cooled
by means of cooling water in the heat exchanger unit 14 to a temperature of about
25-30°C and it is partly sprayed through the nozzles 13 in the cooler, while the remaining
portion is further cooled in the refrigerating unit 16 and is sprayed in said cooler
through the nozzles 15. Not all the water deprived of tar and naphthalene is re-cycled,
because during the process it joints with the condensation water and it grows rich
with ammonia, whereby a portion thereof is drawn off and is conveyed to the ammonia
distilling plant through the piping 25.
[0039] A certain amount of water supplied to the decantation-flotation tank 18 by the cooler
11 and cyclone 17, is withdrawn through the pipings 20 and 21 together with tar and
naphthalene, as stated above, but most of it is withdrawn at an intermediate level
of the decantationflotation tank through the piping 27. This water contains suspended
therein very fine particles of tar and naphthalene such that they have not been able
to move up to the surface or down to the bottom of the decantation-flotation tank.
Said water is conveyed through the piping 27 to the bottom of the header 3. During
this travel a fraction of the naphthalene is absorbed by the tar, and the remaining
fraction will join, on the bottom of said header, the freshly condensed tar, which
has a low naphthalene content. Therefore, this tar absorbs in the header said remaining
naphthalene almost completely, whereafter it will pursue the absorption steps described
above during the successive travel.
[0040] The amount of tar may not be enough, in certain sections of the plant, to absorb,
with sufficient rapidity, the condensed naphthalene in that section. Therefore, some
tar is drawn off the sections where it is not saturated with naphthalene or, preferably,
where it has a relatively low content of naphthalene, and is conveyed to other sections
where naphthalene is to be absorbed. In the illustrated example, a piping 28 is provided
to withdraw tar from the bottom of the decanter 9 and to convey it to the bottom of
the cooler 11 and, through a branch 29, into the piping 27. In fact, in these sections
the existing amount of tar or the naphthalene-saturated condition of tar are such
as to either nullify the absorption of free naphthalene, or to permit it with insufficient
rapidity.
1. A cooling, dehumidifying, de-naphthenizing and de-tarring process for coal distillation
gas exiting from coke-ovens (1), wherein:
- said gas is cooled from the temperature of 700-900°C it has upon exiting from
the coke-ovens (1) to a temperature of 80-90°C, by means of water sprays at the temperature
of about 60-70°C within the end, vertical portion of each of the pipes (2) leading
the gas from an oven (1) to the header (3) where all the gas from a bank is collected
so as to condense the steam exceeding the saturation degree at that temperature and
to condense most tar and anthracene oils which collect in said header (3) together
with the cooling water being sprayed, and a small fraction of naphthalene which dissolves
in the tar and anthracene oils;
- said gas then flows out of said header (3) into the pipings, drawing along water,
tar and anthracene oils to a water/gas separator (6), wherein said gas is separated
from said other materials, and the latter are then collected in a decanter (9);
- tar and anthracene oils settle down by gravity onto the bottom of the decanter
(9), whereby the water, so deprived of tar and anthracene oils, may be re-used for
the process;
- said gas then proceeds beyond the separator (6), still at the temperature of
80-90°C, to a cooler (11), usually of the cold water spray type, wherein water at
the temperature of 2-30°C is sprayed to cool the gas to a temperature of a few degrees
above that of the water, so as to achieve the condensation of all the tar and naphthalene,
corresponding to the saturation thereof, which will be conveyed to a decantation-flotation
tank (18) together with the water that has been sprayed and that has been condensed
as a result of said reduction of temperature;
- said gas then proceeds to a droplet separator (17) where the remaining very
fine particles of water, tar and naphthalene, the latter two being either incorporated
or not in said droplets, are separated and conveyed to said decantation-flotation
tank (18);
- said gas, so deprived of naphthalene and tar then enters the outlet pipings
of the plant to be further processed or to be utilized;
- the amounts of water containing tar and naphthalene, which are conveyed into
the decantation-flotation tank (18) from the cooler (11) and droplet separator (17)
will dwell therein to permit the particles lighter than water, substantially naphthalene,
to float up to the surface, and to permit the heavier particles, i.e. tar, to settle
down onto the bottom, and said water is then withdrawn from an area about at an intermediate
level of the decantation-flotation tank (18) and it only contains particles which
have remained suspended therein due to their very small dimensions;
- said water is then conveyed into the bottom of said header (3), where the flows
of gas from the distilling ovens collect together, and joins the cooling water and
condensation water containing the condensed tar;
- the naphthalene that is condensed in the cooler (11) and is collected in the
droplet separator (17) contacts with the condensed tar and is absorbed thereby by
dissolution, said absorption occurring successively in the cooler (11) and in the
droplet separator (17), in the piping leading to the decantation-flotation tank (18),
within said decantation-flotation tank (18), in the piping (27) from the latter to
said header (3), within the header where it contacts the freshly-condensed tar, in
the successive piping (5) from the header (3) to the water/gas separator (6), in the
following piping (8) from the separator (6) to the decanter (9) of tar, and finally
into said decanter (9), where the absorption of naphthalene into the tar is completed;
- the naphthalene that has moved up to the surface in the decantation-flotation
tank (18) and the tar that has settled down onto the bottom thereof are removed through
surface skimming and bottom discharging pipes (20,21), respectively, together with
a certain amount of water, and are conveyed together in a single piping (22) to the
tar decanter (9);
- during the travel from the decantation-flotation tank (18) to the tar decanter
(9), naphthalene and tar contact intimately with each other, whereby naphthalene will
be absorbed by tar, the absorption being then pursued in the decanter (9) until it
has been completed;
- the water recovered in the decanter (9) and now deprived of naphthalene and
tar is partly re-used for the process of the invention.
2. A process according to claim 1, wherein the gas being cooled in said cooler (11)
is first acted upon by sprayed water (13) at a temperature of 25-30°C and then by
sprayed water (15) at a temperature of 2-10°C.
3. A process according to claims 1 and 2, wherein the water (13) being sprayed at
a temperature of 25-30°C is cooled in heat exchangers by means of cooling water naturally
available at a slightly lower temperature, and the water (15) being sprayed at 2-10°C
is cooled by means of refrigerating units (16) which, in turn, are cooled by means
of said available water.
4. A process according to claim 1 either alone or in combination with one or more
of the claims 2 to 4, wherein the lower temperature of the cooling water being sprayed
in the cooler (11) is above 10°C, up to 30°C, and said gas is cooled only few degrees
below the ambient temperature in the space where said gas is distributed, or at the
same temperature.
5. A process according to claim 1 either alone or in combination with one or all the
claims 2 to 4, wherein some of the tar that in certain steps of the process is not
yet saturated with naphthalene, or preferably has a low content of naphthalene, is
drawn off where such conditions occur and, through suitable pipings, is conveyed to
other steps of the process, which lack of tar capable of absorbing readily the naphthalene
thereat, so as to enhance the contact between naphthalene and said unsaturated tar
and thus to accelerate the absorption of naphthalene into said tar.
6. A process according to claim 1 either alone or in combination with one or more
of the claims 2 to 5, wherein more or less strong turbulent movements are created
within the pipings of the plant by acting either on the speed of the fluids, or the
characteristics of the pumps, or the configuration of the pipings, or the like, so
as to enhance the contact between tar and naphthalene and thus to accelerate to a
maximum extent the absorption of naphthalene into the tar.