Title: Gas To Chemicals
1 Gas To Chemicals New Delhi, September 18-21,
2002 Jens Wagner
Technologically Advanced Natural Gas
Monetization Opportunities for Chemicals
Petrochemicals
2Agenda
-
- Gas To Chemicals - Drivers
- MegaSyn-Technology
- MegaMethanol-Technology
- Gas-Based Petrochemistry
- Gas-Based Refinery
3Vision Lurgi Oel Gas Chemie
We are the leading engineering contractor in the
field of oil/gas/chemicals, customer oriented
and focussed on proprietary technologies and
exclusive licenses for growth markets like
gas-to-chemicals, and their global, professional
realisation from a single source.
4Driver I
Natural Gas Reserves-To-Production Ratio
of global reserves
7,1 7,8 34,6 38,1 3,0 4,3 5,0
Source Energy Information Administration (EAI)
International Natural Gas Information 14 Feb
2001, http//www.eia.doe.gov
53,700 billion ft³ of natural gas are flared per
year
Driver II
World production of ammonia
4x World production of methanol
Source Energy Information Administration (EIA)
International Natural Gas Information 14 Feb
2001, http//www.eia.doe.gov
6Driver III
7Driver III
Source CMAI
8Driver IV
- For years Lurgi Oel Gas Chemie GmbH is one of
the mayor players in the field of Syngas
Generation and Synthesis Technologies. Based on
our - huge experience,
- expertise, and
- success
- the Gas-to-Chemicals (GTC) route is a
consequent further development and
application of our core technologies
and know-how.
Mossgas Fischer-Tropsch Plant
9Lurgi Mega Concept -
Basis of a gas-based Chemicals- and Refinery
Industry
Acetic Acid
Formaldehyd
Stranded Gas
MTBE
SYNGAS CO H2
Methanol
Diesel- Additives
FT- Fischer Tropsch Products
Fuel
Hydrogen
Olefins
DME
Clean Fuels, Lubricants, ? -Olefins
Ammonia
Polypropylene Acrylonitril
Polyethylene Ethylene-Glycol ?-Olefins
Fuel Cell, Green Fuels
Diesel
Energy- Production
Urea
Liquids
Production of many high-value products
10How do You want to produce Your Syngas?
ASU
ASU
5 x 1000 Tubes
1.5 Mio Nm³/h 560 Mio SCF/d Syngas
1.5 Mio Nm³/h 560 Mio SCF/d Syngas
1.5 Mio Nm³/h 560 Mio SCF/d Syngas
11Gas to Syngas (MegaSynTM) -
Investment Cost Comparison
relativecost
106 Nm3/h syngas
12Autothermal Reformer
Process Characteristics
q low S/C ratio ? 1.5 - 0.5 mol/mol ? high CO
selectivity ? low CO2 emission q outlet
temperature ? 900 - 1050 C ? low methane
slip ? close approach to equilibrium q pressure
40 bar commercially proven (up to 70 bar
possible) q single train capacity 500,000 m3
syngas /hr under construction
13Combined Reformer, Mossgas, South Africa
14Gas to Chemicals Processing Routes
Diesel Gasoline LPG Fuel Gas Waxes/Lube
Oil Power Fuel Cells Chemicals (MTBE, Acetic
Acid, Formaldehyde) Diesel/Gasoline Propylene/Poly
propylene Acrylic Acid/Acrylates Ethylene/Propylen
e Fuel (DME) Hydrogen
Fischer Tropsch Synthesis
Upgrading
MtPower
MegaSyn
Natural Gas / Associated Gas
MtSynfuels
Mega-Methanol
MTP
Acrylic Acid
MTO
MTD
MTH
Megammonia
Ammonia/Urea/Fertilizer
15Lurgis LP-Methanol Technology Milestones
- 1969 First LP-Methanol Catalyst Test
- 1970 Cooperation with Süd-Chemie for Catalyst
Manufacturer - 1970 Operation of a 100 Tubes-Reactor
Demonstration Unit - 1972 First 3 LP-Methanol Plants in Operation
- 1997 MegaMethanolTM Concept Published
- 2001 37 LP-Methanol Plants including two awarded
contracts for MegaMethanolTM plants
16 Simplified Diagram of Lurgis MegaMethanol
Technology
- improved gasification
- high energy efficiency for MeOH synthesis
- low investment costs
- large single-train capacity
- methanol production cost of less than 50 /t !
17Methanol Technology Competitive Situation
Market Share
1969 - 1992
1992 - 2001
Lurgi 27
Lurgi 55
MGC, Other 12
MGC, Other 20
ICI 61
ICI 25
18Dimethyl Ether (DME) -Alternative to
Conventional Diesel Fuel
- Excellent transportation fuel (better diesel)
- Very low emission levels
- Clean and efficient power generation
-
- Similar properties as LPG (storage, transport)
DME Energy Carrier of the Future!(see
www.aboutdme.org)
19DME Production by Methanol Dehydration
20Lurgi DME Process Features
- Reactor Adiabatic Fixed Bed Reactor
- High Conversion Rate
- Purity According to Requirement
- Highly efficient Heat Integration Systems,
- resulting in low Utility Requirement
- Low Utility Consumption
- Zero Emission
21Lurgi DME - Economics
MegaMethanol Dehydration Plant DME
production 5000 t/d Natural gas
demand 42.9 MMBtu/tDME 28.5 MMBtu/tMeOH Total
fixed cost (EPC) 415 MMUS Production
Cost 93.0 US/tDME 3.4 /MMBtu Diesel fuel
(for comparison) 4.8 - 6.1 /MMBtu based on NG
price 0.5 US/MMBtu and both, depreciation
ROI 10 of total fixed cost
22MTP - Simplified Process Flow Diagram
23MTP - Technical Highlights
- Propylene production only
- tailor-made, proprietary zeolite catalyst
- Fixed-bed reactors
- Low coking of catalyst results in low number of
regeneration cycles - Discontinuous in-situ regeneration at reaction
temperature - Proven process elements
- Catalyst commercially available
24MTP Technology Status
- PROCESS
- More than 4000 operating hours of pilot plant in
Frankfurt - Demo unit in Norway started 01/ 2002, today about
3000 operating hours, more than 8000 scheduled - Optimisation of process flow sheet for commercial
plant finished - CATALYST
- catalyst development completed by catalyst
supplier - catalyst is commercially manufactured and
available
25MTP Economics I
Case Study B, Blockflow Diagram
1.7 Mio t/aMethanol
520 000 t/aPropylene
12.3 Mio Nm³/dSyngas
3.8 Mio Nm³/d
Poly-propylenePlant
SyngasPlant
Propylene Plant (MTP)
Methanol Plant
NaturalGas
143 000 t/aGasoline
520 000 t/aPolypropylene
26MTP Economics II
Production Cost, Case Study B Integrated
MegaMeOH/MTP/PP Complex
27MTP Economics III
ROI, Case Study B Integrated MegaMeOH / MTP / PP
Complex
28Gas-based Petrochemistry
MeOH-Plant
PP-Plant
Natural GasMethane
SyngasCO H2
Methanol
Propylene
MTP Plant
Polypropylene
Propylene
Propylene
Oxoalcohol-Plant
Acrylic Acid
Acrylic AcidPlant
Acrylic Acid
Acrylic Acid
2-EHOH
BuOH
2-EHOH Acryl. Plant
Bu-Acryl. Plant
2EHAC
BuAc
Butylacrylate
2-Ethylhexylacrylate
29Gas Refinery via Methanol - Lurgis MtSynfuel
(MTS)
30Comparison Lurgi MTS Route - FT Synthesis I
31Comparison Lurgi MTS Route - FT Synthesis II
Cost of Production Estimate1)
- Plant Location Middle East
- Plant Capacity 50,000 barrels per day products
- Natural Gas Price 0.50 US / MMBtu
- Depreciation 10 for ISBL / 5 for OSBL
- Return on Investment 10
- Total Capital Investment Includes Total Plant
Capital (ISBLOSBL) plus 20 for Other
Project Cost, year 2000 - Cost of Production Includes depreciation and 10
ROI - Product Market Prices Year 2000, adjusted to
shipping costs from Middle East and
applicable tariffs for the considered regions
- 1) Basis Chem Systems, 2001
32Comparison Lurgi MTS Route - FT Synthesis
IIICost of Production Estimate
33Conclusions - Future Perspectives
- The challenge of abundant NG is answered.
- MegaSyn and MegaMethanol - Lurgis Mega
Concept opens - new routes of gas
monetisation - Dimethyl ether (DME) can be produced at
attractive coststo become an economical fuel - Propylene is a high-demand, high value product.
It can be pro-duced cheaper than by conventional
processes - The economics of MtSynfuels are comparable to FT
routes - A gas-based petrochemistry/refinery is
developed by Lurgi
34Back-up slides
35Latest Methanol Project References
- Methanex, USA 1700 mtpd 1992
- Statoil, Norway 2400 mtpd 1992
- CINOPEC, China 340 mtpd 1993
- KMI, Indonesia 2000 mtpd 1994
- NPC, Iran 2000 mtpd 1995
- Sastech, RSA 400 mtpd 1996
- Titan, Trinidad 2500 mtpd 1997
- PIC, Kuwait 2000 mtpd 1998
- YPF, Argentina 1200 mtpd 1999
- Atlas, Trinidad 5000 mtpd 1999
- NPC, 4th Methanol, Iran 5000 mtpd 2000
36Two-Step Methanol Synthesis
Water Cooled Reactor
Gas Cooled Reactor
- Operation at the Optimum Reaction Route
- High Equilibrium Driving Force
- High Conversion Rate
- Elimination of Reactor Feed Preheater
- Elimination of Catalyst Poisoning
- Simple and Exact Reaction Control
- Quasi Isothermal Operation
- High Methanol Yield
- High Reliability
- High Energy Efficiency
37Dimethyl Ether (DME) -Quality Aspects of Diesel
Fuel
- Ignition
- Characteristics of the Components
- Cetane Number
- Density, Effect on Engine Performance
- Exhaust Gas Emissions, Sulfur, Particulates, Nox
- Viscosity, narrow Limits
- Cold Flow Properties, substitutes Kerosene
38Properties of DME and other Fuel
Name
DME
Propane
Methane
Methanol
Diesel
Chemical formula
CH
OCH
C
H
CH
CH
OH
3
3
3
8
4
3
Molecular
weight
46.07
44.1
16.04
32.04
Boiling point at 0.1MPa, C
-24.8
-42.1
-161.5
64.7
150-370
-
Liquid density, kg/m³ (20C)
666
501
792
Relative density (gaseous, air1)
1.59
1.52
0.55
-
-
Vapor pressure, MPa (20C)
0.51
0.85
-
-
-
Explosive limits (
vol in air)
3-17
2.1-9.4
5-15
5.5-44
0.6-6.5
Cetane number
55-60
5
0
5
40-55
42.5
19.9
Net calorific value (MJ/kg)
28.84
46.3
50
39DME Synthesis Alternatives
40Lurgi DME - Process
41Synfuels, Mossel Bay, RSA
42MTP - Product Slate
43MTP RD Development Strategy
DME pre- reactors
Three-Stage PDU (Pilot Plant)
- tests for catalyst optimization
- optimization of reaction conditions in 1st, 2nd
and 3rd stage - testing optimization of simulated recycle
streams - optimization of steam dilution
- test of regeneration conditions
- optimization of DME pre-reactor
1st stage
3rd stage
2nd stage
44MTP RD - Objective of Demo Unit
- Demo Unit is the next step of scale-up allowing
final scale-up to industrial size in one last
step - Compare Demo Unit results with Pilot Plant
(successful) - confirm operating conditions and process
performance in long time operation - test of catalyst life, deactivation and
regeneration, demonstrate catalyst lifetime
greater than 1 year - test influence of real hydrocarbon recycle on
product yield and catalyst activity
Demo Plant, Norway, 2002
45MTP - Process Design of Commercial Plant
46MTP Economics
47MTP Reactor System
Fixed-Bed
Fluidised-Bed
- propylene production only
- more complicated set-up to control reaction
temperature - low risk of scale-up
- low coking tendency of catalyst
- discontinuous in-situ regeneration at reaction
temperature (no stress on the catalyst) - defined residence time for maximum selectivity
- ethylene/propylene co-production
- good temperature control
- complicated multi-step scale-up
- high coking tendency of catalyst
- continuous regeneration at elevated temperatures
oxygen breakthrough into process possible - broad residence time distribution
48Lurgis FT Experience I
- Commercialisation of ARGE-synthesis in 1952
- location Sasolburg / South Africa
- start up 1955
- no. of reactors 5
- All original reactors still in operation
todayextension of capacity in 1987 ( 1 reactor)
- Modern FT Reactor Technology
- Slurry phase reactor (by far preferred)
- Tubular reactor
- Fluidised bed reactor
- Lurgi has commercial experience in all these
reactor technologies
49Lurgis FT Experience II
- Lurgi designed the syngas production unitsof all
FT-plants currently in commercial operation - Sasol/Secunda (coal gasification)
- Mossgas (combined reforming of NG)
- SMDS/Bintulu (partial oxidation of NG)
Today, Lurgi MegaSyn is available for FT
Synthesesas well as for MtSynfuel Lurgis
route through methanol to transportation fuels
50Gas-based Petrochemistry