[0001] This application is divided from European Patent Application No. 84 901 096.2, published
on 19th June 1985 as EP-A1-0 144 430.
[0002] This invention relates to a trouble-free nitrogen gas producing apparatus which can
produce pure nitrogen gas at a low cost.
[0003] In the electronics industry, quite a large quantity of nitrogen gas is used and very
high purity is now demanded to maintain and improve the accuracy of parts.
[0004] Nitrogen gas has been produced so far by low temperature separation methods by which
air as the raw material is compressed with a compressor, then is put into an adsorption
cylinder to eliminate CO
2 gas and moisture content, then is cooled through heat exchange with refrigerant in
a heat exchanger, then is turned into nitrogen gas product by low temparature separation
in a rectifying column, and the nitrogen gas product is heated close to normal temperature
through the said heat exchanger.
[0005] In many cases, however, trouble results if the nitrogen gas is used as it is because
of oxygen content as an impurity.
[0006] To remove oxygen as an impurity, the following two methods are available.
[0007] One is to add a small quantity of hydrogen to the nitrogen gas by using Pt catalyst
and to turn the oxygen into water by reaction with the hydrogen in atmosphere of about
200°C.
[0008] Another method is to put the oxygen in the nitrogen gas in contact with Ni catalyst
in an atmosphere at about 200°C and to eliminate oxygen through reaction of Ni + 1/20
2 → NiO.
[0009] By either method, however, the nitrogen gas must be heated to a high temperature
and be put in contact with a catalyst. It is not possible, therefore, to incorporate
such apparatus into the nitrogen gas producing apparatus of an ultra-low temperature
system. A refining apparatus must be installed separately from the nitrogen gas producing
apparatus, which makes the whole system larger.
[0010] Moreover, the first method requires a high level of skill for operation since the
quantity of hydrogen must be controlled accurately. If the hydrogen added is not in
exactly the quantity required for reaction with the oxygen impurity, the oxygen or
the added hydrogen is still left as an impurity.
[0011] By the second method, the cost of refining is increased by the H
2 re-generation equipment, as it is necessary to regenerate NiO produced through reaction
with the oxygen impurity (NiO + H
2 → Ni + H
2O). It has been demanded, therefore, to solve these problems.
[0012] For nitrogen gas producing apparatus of the conventional low temperature separation
type, an expansion turbine is used for cooling the refrigerant of the heat exchanger
used to cool down the compressed air by heat exchange, and the turbine is driven by
the pressure of the gas evaporated from the liquid air accumulated in the rectifying
column (nitrogen of low boiling point is taken out as gas by low temperature separation
and the residual air is accumulated as oxygen rich liquid air).
[0013] Follow-up operation of changing load (changes in the quantity of product nitrogen
gas taken out) is difficult since the rotation of the expansion turbine is very fast
(several tens of thousand per minute). It is therefore, difficult to change the feeding
quantity of liquid air to the expansion turbine exactly according to the changes in
the quantity of product nitrogen gas taken out so that the compressed air is cooled
to a constant temperature at all times.
[0014] As a result, the purity of the product nitrogen gas differs and nitrogen gas of low
purity is often produced.
[0015] The expansion turbine requires high precision in its mechanical structure because
of the highspeed of rotation, the cost is high, and the intricate mechanism is subjected
to frequent troubles.
[0016] EP 0 107 418, which is prior art to this application under the provisions of Article
54(3) EPC, discloses apparatus of this type, employing an expansion turbine to provide
refrigerant for the incoming compressed air.
[0017] An apparatus has been proposed in FR 2 225 705, in which no expansion turbine is
provided and liquid nitrogen is supplied to a rectifying column. This kind of apparatus
does not have the disadvantage of an expansion turbine. However, this apparatus produces
nitrogen gas for preventing fire in tankers and the like, and is not required to achieve
the constant high purity of nitrogen gas product required by the electronics industry.
The apparatus of this document has the disadvantage that there are variations in the
purity of the nitrogen gas product. Also, for preventing fire, the demand for nitrogen
gas product does not fluctuate so a control means to meet fluctuations of nitrogen
gas consumption is not provided. Accordingly, it is impossible for the rate of production
to change in accordance with the fluctuations of nitrogen gas consumption without
deterioration in the purity of the nitrogen gas.
[0018] Fig. 1 shows the nitrogen gas producing apparatus of PSA system. In the drawing,
(1) is the air inlet, (2) is the air compressor, (3) is the after cooler, (3a) is
the cooling water supply channel, and (4) is the oil-water separator, (5) is the 1st
adsorption tank, (6) is the 2nd adsorption tank, and V1, V2 are air operated valves
to fee the air compressed by the compressor (2) to the adsorption tank (5) or (6),
V3 and V4 are vacuum valves to turn inside of the adsorption tank (5) or (6) to vacuum
condition by the operation of the vacuum pump (6a), (6b) is the cooling pipe to supply
cooling water to the vacuum pump (6a), (6c) is the silencer, and (6d) is the exhaust
pipe, V5, V6, V7, and V9 are air operated valves. (7) is the product tank connected
to the adsorption tanks (5) (6) through the pipe (8). (7a) is a product nitrogen gas
takeout pipe, (7b) is an impurity analyzer, and (7c) is a flow-meter.
[0019] In this nitrogen gas producing apparatus, air is compressed by the air compressor
(2), the compressed air is cooled by the after-cooler (3) attached to the air compressor,
the condensed water is removed by the separator (4), then the compressed air is supplied
into the adsorption tank (5) or (6) through the air operated valve (V1) or (V2).
[0020] Two adsorption tanks (5) (6) respectively incorporate a carbon molecular sieve for
oxygen adsorption, and the compressed air is supplied into the adsorption tanks (5)
(6) alternatively every minute by pressure swing method.
[0021] The inside of the adsorption tank (6) or (5) to which no compressed air is supplied
is kept under vacuum condition by the vacuum pump (6a). In other words, the air compressed
by the air compressor (2) goes into one of the two adsorption tanks (5) or (6) and
the oxygen content is adsorbed and removed by the carbon molecular sieve, then the
nitrogen gas is supplied into the product tank (7) through the valves (V5, V7, V9),
and is taken out through the pipe (7a). At this time, the other adsorption tank (6)
or (5) shuts off the air from the air compressor (2) since the valve (V2) closes,
and the inside is evacuated by the vacuum pump (6a) as the valve (V4) opens. Accordingly,
the oxygen adsorbed by the carbon molecular sieve is removed to re-generate the carbon
molecular sieve.
[0022] Nitrogen gas is supplied from the adsorption tanks (5) (6) alternatively to the product
tank (7) to assure continuous feeding of nitrogen gas.
[0023] By this nitrogen gas producing apparatus, the characteristic of carbon molecular
sieve of selective adsorption of oxygen is effectively used to produce nitrogen gas
at a low cost.
[0024] However, a number of valves are necessary, the valve operation is intricate, and
trouble tends to happen frequently since the two adsorption tanks (5) (6) are operated
alternately for one minute to feed compressed air and one of the tanks is subjected
to evacuation.
[0025] It is necessary, therefore, to provide two sets of adsorption tanks (5) (6) and to
use one set as the spare.
[0026] As described above, the nitrogen producing apparatus of PSA method is also subject
to frequent trouble due to a large number of valves and requires an extra, spare,
apparatus. It was therefore demanded to develop a nitrogen gas producing apparatus
which can turn out highly pure nitrogen gas at a low cost.
[0027] In view of the foregoing, it is the primary object of this invention to provide a
nitrogen gas producing apparatus which can produce highly pure nitrogen gas at a low
cost yet without any trouble.
[0028] According to the present invention, there is provided apparatus for producing highly
pure nitrogen gas as defined in claim 1.
[0029] For the apparatus, a liquefied nitrogen storing means is provided independently from
the nitrogen gas separating system to separate nitrogen gas from air, the liquefied
nitrogen in the storage means is supplied into the liquid nitrogen holder of the rectifying
column of the nitrogen gas separating system, the compressed air supplied into the
rectifying column is cooled by using evaporation heat of the liquefied nitrogen, a
part of the compressed air (oxygen content in the main) is separated by liquefaction
and the nitrogen is kept in gas form, then the gas mixed with the gassified liquid
nitrogen after used as the cooling source of the rectifying column and is taken out
as the product nitrogen gas. Accordingly, nitrogen gas can be obtained at a lower
cost.
[0030] To be more specific, this apparatus uses liquefied nitrogen as the source of cooling
and after use, the liquefied nitrogen is not discarded but is mixed with the nitrogen
gas made from air to be turned into product nitrogen gas. Accordinly, the method is
free from any waste of natural resources. Since the apparatus is provided with a condenser
at the top of the rectifying column, a shortage of reflux produced in the said condenser
is made up by supplying liquid nitrogen from the liquid nitrogen storage. The obtained
product nitrogen gas is about 10 times of the consumed liquefied nitrogen, the cost
of product nitrogen gas can be reduced substantially.
[0031] The use of liquefied nitrogen as the cooling source for the compressed air instead
of an expansion turbine enables delicate adjustment of it's feeding amount. This apparatus
is provided with a means to control the feeding amount of the said liquefied nitrogen
from the storage which enables accurate follow-up of changing load (changes in taken-out
quantity of nitrogen gas product). The purity is, therefore, stable and highly pure
nitrogen gas can be produced.
[0032] Moreover, the apparatus is subjected to almost no trouble as no expansion turbine
which is susceptible to troubles is used and not many valves are required unlike PSA
system.
[0033] In other words, the apparatus has almost no moving parts compared with the conventional
methods and is, therefore, subjected to little trouble. There is no need to prepare
an extra set of adsorption tanks as the spare as it is necessary for PSA system, which
can save the equipment cost.
[0034] The invention will now be further described, with reference to Figure 2 of the drawings
which is a structural drawing of an embodiment of the present invention.
[0035] This shows the structure of an embodiment of the present invention. In the drawing,
(9) is an air compressor (10) is a drain separator, (11) is a Freon cooler, and (12)
is a pair of adsorption cylinders. The adsorption cylinders (12) are filled with molecular
sieves to adsorb and remove H
2O and CO
2 in the air compressed by the air compressor (9). (13) is the 1st heat exchanger into
which the compressed air after elimination of H
2O and CO
2 by the adsorption cylinders (12) is supplied. (14) is the 2nd heat exchanger, into
which the compressed air coming through the 1st heat exchanger is supplied. (15) is
a rectifying column provided with a condenser (16) at the top to cool the compressed
air cooled down to ultra low temperature by the 1st and 2nd heat exchangers (13, 14)
still further, to turn a part of the compressed air into liquid to be kept on the
bottom, and to take out nitrogen only in gas form.
[0036] That is, the rectifying column (15) functions to cool the compressed air cooled down
to ultra low temperature (about -170°C) through the 1st and the 2nd heat exchangers
(13, 14) further by passing through the liquefied air (18) (N
2 50 - 70%, O
2 30 - 50%) kept on the bottom of the rectifying column (15) by a pipe (17), then to
jet the air inside through the expansion valve (19), and oxygen is liquefied by the
condenser (16) and nitrogen is left in gas form.
[0037] The condenser (16) comprises a heat exchanger (16c) in the condenser (16), to cool
the heat exchanger (16c) with the liquefied air (18) from the bottom of the tower
(22), supplied through valve (19), to return the liquefied portion of the compressed
air to the tower (22). Liquefied nitrogen is supplied from the liquefied nitrogen
tank (23) through pipe (24) to a liquid nitrogen holder X which accumulates reflux
produced in the condenser (16).
[0038] A level gauge (25) is provided to detect the level of liquefied air in the condenser
(16) and adjust the valve (26) to control the supply of liquefied nitrogen from the
liquefied nitrogen storage tank (23) into the column (15) according to the level of
liquefied air in the condenser (16).
[0039] (27) is an outlet pipe to take out nitrogen gas from the part of the column (15)
and functions to guide the nitrogen gas of ultra low temperature into the 2nd and
1st heat exchangers (14,13), to heat the gas to normal temperature by heat exchange
with the compressed air supplied into the heat exchangers, and to feed into the main
pipe (28). The outlet pipe (27) is provided with an oxygen adsorption cylinder (27a),
which incorporate adsorbent that adsorbs oxygen and carbon monoxide selectively at
ultra low temperature.
[0040] The alternate long and short dash line shows a vacuum cooling box in which the heat
exchangers (13,14) and the rectifying column (15) are housed and heat-insulated by
vacuum perlite.
[0041] (29) is the pipe to feed the gassified portion of the compressed air from the top
of the condenser (16) into the 2nd and 1st heat exchangers (14,13), and (29a) is the
pressure holding valve. After heat exchange (cooling of compressed air) in the 2nd
and 1st heat exchangers (14,13), the air is discharged from the 1st heat exchanger
(13) as indicated by the arrow A.
[0042] (30) is the line of back-up system to feed the liquefied nitrogen in the liquefied
nitrogen storage tank (23) into the main pipe (28) through evaporation of the evaporator
(31) should the line of the air compression system go out of order, (32) is an impurity
analyzer to analyze the purity of the product nitrogen gas fed out to the main pipe.
If the purity is low, the valves (34), (34a) are operated to discard the product nitrogen
gas to the outside as shown by the arrow B.
[0043] Nitrogen gas is produced by this apparatus through the following processes.
[0044] Air is compressed by the air compressor (9) and moisture in the compressed air is
removed by the drain separator (10), then the air is cooled by the Freon cooler (11),
sent to the adsorption cylinders (12) as being cooled, and H
2O and CO
2 in the air are removed by adsorption.
[0045] The compressed air after removal of H
2O and CO
2 is supplied into the 1st and 2nd heat exchangers (13) (14) to be cooled down to ultra
low temperature, then is cooled further by the liquid air (18) stored at the bottom
of the rectifying column (15) then is ejected into the tower (22) of the rectifying
column (15).
[0046] Oxygen in the air is liquefied by using the difference in the boiling point between
nitrogen and oxygen (oxygen -183°C; nitrogen -196°C), nitrogen is taken out in gas
form, supplied into the 1st or the 2nd heat exchanger (13 or 14) to be heated close
to the normal temperature, then is taken out as nitrogen gas through the main pipe
(28).
[0047] In this case, the liquefied air from the bottom of the rectifying column (15) functions
as the cooling source of the condenser (16). The liquefied nitrogen itself turns into
gas and is supplied into the main pipe (28), mixed with the nitrogen gas in the air
from the rectifying column (15), then is taken out as product nitrogen gas.
[0048] With this nitrogen gas producing apparatus, highly pure nitrogen gas can be obtained
at very low cost because an oxygen and so forth are separated from the compressed
air by liquefaction using the evaporation heat of liquefied nitrogen, and only nitrogen
is taken out in gas form and mixed with liquefied nitrogen serving as the cooling
source (the nitrogen itself is gassified in this stage) to be turned into product
nitrogen gas.
[0049] In other words, the apparatus can produce highly pure nitrogen gas with 0.3 ppm or
less of impurity oxygen by setting the rectifying column (15) at high purity since
no expansion turbine is used unlike the case of conventional method.
[0050] By the conventional apparatus of low temperature separation type, the nitrogen gas
obtained contains oxygen of 5 ppm as impurity and by the nitrogen gas producing apparatus
of PSA method, the obtained gas contains so much oxygen as 1000 ppm. Accordingly the
apparatus, PSA type in particular, are not applicable as they are to electronic industry
where highly pure nitrogen gas is required.
[0051] To be used for electronic industry, it is necessary to provide a refining apparatus
separately and to remove oxygen (impurity) in nitrogen gas by adding hydrogen and
by combining oxygen with hydrogen (into H
2O).
[0052] By this process, however, hydrogen goes into nitrogen gas as impurity and the purity
is improved only a little even if the nitrogen gas is passed through a refining apparatus.
Moreover, the nitrogen gas obtained from the nitrogen gas producing apparatus of PSA
type contains CO
2 gas of 5 to 10 ppm as impurity and another adsorption tank to remove CO
2 gas is necessary in addition.
[0053] With the nitrogen gas producing apparatus by the present invention, on the other
hand, highly pure nitrogen gas which can be used for electronic industry as it is
can be obtained. Moreover, the gas does not contain any CO
2 gas (eliminated by liquefaction within the producing apparatus), and there is no
need to provide any adsorption tank for CO
2 gas separately. In the condenser (16) of the rectifying column (15), a part of the
nitrogen gas rising from the tower (22) and through a first connecting pipe (A') is
liquefied and a part of the liquefied nitrogen pours back to the liquid nitrogen holder
X in the tower (22) through a second connecting pipe (B') as reflux. At the upper
part of the condenser (16), He and H
2 of lower boiling point (-269°C and 253°C) are accumulated and these get mixed if
nitrogen gas is taken out from the upper part. To prevent this, it is desirable to
take out nitrogen gas from the top of the tower (22) not from the top of the condenser
(16).
[0054] By the nitrogen gas producing apparatus of the present invention, feeding liquefied
nitrogen gas of 100 Nm
3 from the liquefied nitrogen gas tank to the condenser (16) can obtain product nitrogen
gas of 1000 Nm
3. That is, the product nitrogen gas obtained is 10 times of the liquefied nitrogen
supplied.
[0055] Compared with conventional nitrogen gas producing apparatus of PSA type or of low
temperature separation type, the apparatus is simple and the whole system can be lower
in cost, and reliability of the apparatus is higher as not many valves or no expansion
turbine are required.
[0056] Moreover, nitrogen gas can be supplied even when the line of air compression system
is out of order by the line of back-up system and supply of nitrogen gas is never
interrupted.
[0057] As the adsorbent, synthetic zeolite 3A, 4A or 5A having pore diameter of 3A, 4A or
5A (molecular sieve 3A, 4A, or 5A made by Union Carbide) is used, for example. These
synthetic zeolite 3A, 4A, and 5A respectively show highly selective adsorption property
to oxygen and carbon monoxide at ultra low temperature.
[0058] Accordingly, the impurity in the discharged nitrogen gas from the upper space of
the condenser (16) is eliminated and purity of the product nitrogen gas is improved
further. Synthetic Zeolite 13X of Union Carbide is also used in place of the said
synthetic zeolite 3A, 4A or 5A.
[0059] As a feature of this nitrogen gas producing apparatus, impurities such as oxygen
and carbon monoxide are eliminated very easily by effectively using the characteristics
of synthetic zeolite.
[0060] With this apparatus, the nitrogen gas produced by gassification of the liquefied
nitrogen in the nitrogen tank is also passed through the oxygen adsorption cylinder
(11) in the same manner as the nitrogen gas obtained from compressed air. Even when
the liquefied nitrogen in the nitrogen tank contains impurities such as oxygen and
carbon monoxide, therefore, the purity of the obtained product nitrogen gas is not
lowered. In this case, the quantity of oxygen and carbon monoxide in the ultra low
temperature nitrogen gas guided into the oxygen adsorption cylinder (11) has been
reduced to a low level while going through the rectifying column (15). Accordingly,
the quantity of oxygen and carbon monoxide adsorbed in the cylinder (11) is minimal.
One unit of adsorption cylinder suffices and regeneration of zeolite once a year is
sufficient.