Title: Pollution Prevention for Unit Operations
1Chapter 6
- Pollution Prevention for Unit Operations Part 2
2Pollution Prevention for Chemical Reactors
- From an environmental perspective, reactors are
the most important unit operation in a chemical
process. - The degree of conversion of feed to desired
products influences all subsequent separation
processes, recycle structure for reactors, waste
treatment options, energy consumption, and
ultimately pollution releases to the environment. - Once a chemical reaction pathway has been chosen,
the inherent product and byproduct (waste)
distribution for the process are to a large
extent established.
3REACTOR PERFORMANCE
- Conversion (x)
- (reactant consumed in the reactor)/(reactant
fed to the reactor) - Selectivity (S)
- (desired product produced)/(reactant consumed
in the reactor)SF - Reactor Yield (Y)
- (desired product produced)/(reactant fed to the
reactor)SF
4STOICHIOMETRIC FACTOR (SF)
- The stoichiometric moles of reactant required per
mole of product
5Gas recycle
Purge
H2 , CH4
Toluene Benzene Diphenyl
Benzene
Reactor system
Separation system
H2 , CH4
Toluene
Dipheny1
Toluene recycle
Material Balance of the Limiting Reactant
(Toluene)
Assumption completely recover and recycle the
limiting reactant.
6Design Considerations
- The raw materials, products, and byproducts
should have a relatively low environmental and
health impact potential. - The yield and selectivity should both be high.
- Energy consumption should be low.
- The life-cycle impacts reactants, products and
byproducts should be relatively low.
7Waste Reduction Methods in Reactor Design
- Changing process chemistry (precursors and/or
catalysts) - Avoiding storage of hazardous materials (in situ,
on-demand generation) - Maximizing selectivity
- Prolonging catalyst life
- Combining reactor and separator.
8Material Use and Selection
- Raw materials and feedstocks
- New process chemistry
- Purer raw material
- Solvents
- Substitute solvent
- Catalysts
- can allow the use of more environmentally benign
chemicals as raw materials, - can increase selectivity toward the desired
product and away from the unwanted by product
(waste), - can convert waste chemicals to raw materials,
- can create environmentally acceptable products
directly from the reactions.
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10Parallel Reaction Networks
- Parallel reactions
- Rate expressions
11The reaction selectivity is constant and
independent of residence time for 1st-order,
irreversible, isothermal parallel reactions.
12Series Reaction Networks
- Series reactions
- Rate expressions
13To minimize waste generation in series reactions,
it is important to operate the reactor so that
the ratio is as large as possible and to control
the reaction residence time.
14Reversible Reactions
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16Impact of Temperature on Selectivity
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18Impact of Concentration on Selectivity
- The selectivity ratio for parallel reactions
- If then selectivity is improved by
increasing the conc. of R If otherwise, then the
conc. of R should be decreased. - The analysis of series reactions is more complex.
19Impact of Mixing on Selectivity
- Improve physical mixing in the reactor, which
will improve selectivity if the reaction order is
greater than 1. - Distribute feeds better to avoid
short-circuiting. - Premixing of reactants may result in better
selectivity. - Provide a separate reactor for recycle streams.
- Examine heating and cooling techniques to avoid
cool spots and hot spots. Eliminate direct steam
injection.
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21Wastes Generated by Separation Devices
- Separation unit operations generate waste because
- the separation steps themselves are not 100
efficient, and - require
- additional energy input or
- waste treatment
- to deal with off-spec products.
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23Choice of Mass Separating Agent
- A poor choice may result in exposure to toxic
substances fro not only facility workers but also
consumers who use the end product. - A poor choice may lead to excessive energy
consumption and the associated health impacts of
the emitted criteria air pollutants.
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25Pollution Prevention Approaches for Separation
Equipments
- Minimize the wastes and emissions that are
routinely generated - Control excursions in operating conditions
- Improve the design efficiency.
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27Process Wastes Generated from Distillation
- By allowing impurities to remain in a product,
- By forming waste within the column itself (in
reboiler), - By inadequate condensing of overhead product
(through the condenser vent), and - By excessive energy use.
28Pollution Prevention Methods for Distillation
Columns
- Increase the reflux ratio, add a section to the
column, retray/repack the column, or improve feed
distribution to increase column efficiency. - Changing the feed location may increase product
purity. - Insulate or preheat feed to reduce the load on
the reboiler. - Reduce the pressure drop in column, which reduce
the load on reboiler. - Vacuum distillation may reduce reboiler
requirements.
29Separative Reactors
- The key feature allowing for the prevention of
waste generation and maximizing product yield is
the ability to control the addition of reactant
and the removal of product more precisely than in
traditional designs. - Separation units that have been integrated with
reaction include distillation, membrane
separation, and adsorption.
30Combined Reactor/Separator Catalytic
Distillation
- The conventional MTBE (methyl tert-butyl ether)
producing process (from methanol and isobutylene)
is given in Figure 6-9a. - The alternative process is to feed the raw
materials to a distillation column in which some
of the packing material has been replaced by
catalyst. - Fugitive and process emissions are reduced.
- Fewer heat exchangers are required.
- Water is not needed to separate the components.
- Reaction equilibrium can be shifted since MTBE is
less volatile than the reactants. In other
words, it moves down the distillation column and
away from the reaction zone as it is formed.
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32Combined Reactor/Separator Membrane Technology
- Applicable when the product molecules are smaller
than the reactant molecules. - Both types of membrane in Figure 6-10 hold
particular promise for reversible reactions
because the product is removed as it is formed.
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35Applications of Membrane Separative Reactors
- Thermodynamically-limited reactions, e.g.,
C6H12?C6H63H2 - Parallel reactions in which product formation has
a lower reaction order than byproduct generation - Series reactions such as selective
dehydrogenations and partial oxidations - Series-parallel reactions
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37Sources of Waste from Heat Exchangers
- Heat exchangers can be a direct source of waste
when high temperatures cause the fluids they
contain to form sludges. - Because it reduces efficiency and increase energy
requirements, sludge buildup in heat exchangers
is an indirect source of combustion-related
emissions.
38Sludge Reduction Methods
- Reduce the temperature used in the heat
exchanger (a) thermocompressor (Figure 6-12)
(b) staged heating (Figure 6-13). - Plate-and-frame exchangers
- Scraped-wall exchangers
- Noncorroding tubes
- Antifoulants
- On-line cleaning techniques
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41Fugitive Air Emissions
- These releases include equipment leaks from
valves, pump seals, piping connectors, pressure
relief valves, flanges, compressor seals,
sampling connections, open-ended lines, and air
releases from building ventilation system, etc. - They are not easily identifiable and relatively
large in number.
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43Methods to Reduce Fugitive Emissions
- Leak detection and repair (LDAR) of leaking
equipment - Equipment modification or replacement with
emission-less technologies.
44Leak Detection and Repair
- In a LDAR program, equipment such as pumps and
valves are monitored periodically using an
organic vapor analyzer (OVA). - If the source registers an OVA reading over a
threshold value (gt10000ppm), the equipment is
said to be leaking and repair is required.
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