Title: Amine Thermal Degradation
1Amine Thermal Degradation
2Overview
- Carbamate Polymerization of MEA
- Background
- Chemistry
- Model
- PZ and MEA/PZ Blends
- Amine Screening
3Amine Losses
- Oxidative Degradation A. Sexton
- Thermal Degradation degradation occuring at
stripper and reclaimer conditions - Carbamate polymerization
- Other thermal degradation
- Volatility M. Hilliard
- Physical Losses
4Amine Losses
Thermal Degradation
Oxidative Degradation
Vapor Losses
5Thermal Degradation
- Industry standards currently limit MEA
concentration at 30wt (15wt being the standard
for natural gas treating) due to concern over
increased corrosion and thermal degradation - Degradation can lead to ineffective CO2 capture,
loss of expensive solvent, increased equipment
corrosion, and an increased environmental impact
6Chemistry
H
CO2
MEA Carbamate
MEA
H2O
H
2-Oxazolidone
Polderman Dillon and Steele (1955)
7Chemistry - Continued
H2O
MEA
1-(2-hydroxyethyl)-2-imidazolidone (HEIA)
H2O
CO2
N-(2-hydroxyethyl)-ethylenediamine (HEEDA)
8What Do We Know
- MEA Carbamate Polymerization Factors
- CO2 loading
- Temperature
- Amine concentration
- Literature for MEA
- No kinetic data available
- Controlled when solutions held at 15 wt in
industrial applications
9Sample Apparatus
- Use high pressure sample containers made of 316L
stainless steel tubing and endcaps - Forced convection oven to maintain constant
temperature for a large number of samples - Maintains CO2 loading in solution at elevated
temperature and pressure to accelerate thermal
degradation - Simple experimental design and allows for a large
number of solutions to be tested at one time
10Analytical
- GC
- High temperatures can alter results
- Separation of polar compounds difficult and cross
contamination in sample port - HPLC
- Amine detection difficult with standard detectors
- Can identify and quantify nonionic species
- Cation IC
- Separates positively charged ions
- Will not detect non-ionic species
- Can measure amine disappearance and the formation
of ionic species (highly polar)
11MEA Experiments
- Matrix of samples
- MEA Concentration (15-40wt)
- CO2 Loading (0.2-0.5)
- Temperature (100-150oC)
- 100oC and 150oC experiments in 2ml sample
containers - 120oC and 135oC experiments in 10ml containers
1211m MEA after 8 wks at 135oC
MEA
HEEDA
13Emperical Data Regression
where K is the temperature dependent rate
constant given by
- MEAf final MEA concentration (molality)
- MEAo initial MEA concentration (molality)
- Loading defined as moles CO2 per mole amine
- t time (weeks)
- T Temperature (K)
14Effect of Loading (T135C)
a0.2
a0.4
a0.5
15Effect of Temperature (a0.4)
100oC
120oC
135oC
150oC
16Effect of Concentration (T135oC a0.4)
7m
3.5m
11m
17HEEDA Formation 11m MEA at 135oC
a0.2
a0.4
a0.5
18Thermal Degradation Costs
- Approximately 2/ton CO2 allocated to solvent
make-up in most cost models - Assumes 1.5kg MEA/ton CO2 and a cost of 1.32/kg
MEA - 3.5m MEA, P1atm, 0.10/ton CO2
- 11m MEA, P2.5 atm, 1.60/ton CO2
- Does not include corrosion or reclaimer costs
- Natural gas processing experience says reclaimer
composes 50 of thermal degradation - Corrosion has been shown to increase in the
presence of HEEDA
19MEA Conclusions
- Temperature has the greatest effect on thermal
degradation in the stripper - Quadruples every 15oC
- Double pressure 15oC temp increase
- Loading increases degradation slightly more than
1st order - Concentration has multiple effects
- Slightly more than 1st order in concentration
- In practice an increase in concentration yields
increased stripper temperatures due to increased
BP of solution (3.5m to 11m increases temperature
by 4oC and increases thermal degradation by 40)
20MEA/PZ Blended Systems
- Made measurements of aqueous PZ and a 7m MEA/2m
PZ blend at varying temperatures - PZ not expected to degrade since it does not have
an alcohol group to form an oxazolidone
intermediate - Unknown what the blended system would do
21Aqueous PZ after 8 weeks at 150oC
PZ
These peaks are in the time 0 sample
22Degraded MEA/PZ after 3 weeks at 135oC
MEA
Degradation Products
PZ
23Amine Losses after 2 Weeks
Solvent Temp (oC) MEA Loss () PZ Loss () Total Amine Loss ()
Pure PZ 120 - lt2.0 lt2.0
Pure MEA 120 4.0 - 4.0
MEA/PZ Blend 120 5.0 8.6 6.3
Pure PZ 135 - lt2.0 lt2.0
Pure MEA 135 18.1 - 18.1
MEA/PZ Blend 135 11.9 31.8 19.1
All systems have a loading of 0.4 and similar
moles of alkilinity
24PZ Blend Conclusions
- PZ with a loading of 0.4 did not degrade at 150oC
for over 8 weeks - The blended systems preferentially destroyed PZ,
the more expensive solvent - PZ is a stronger nucleophile so it attacks the
MEA oxazolidone structure more readily than MEA
thereby increasing degradation
25Other Amines
- Set up several screening experiments on other
amine systems including - EDA
- DETA
- MDEA
- HEEDA
- DGA
- AMP
- Only measured ionic degradation products
26Amine Screening(T135oC a0.4 t4wks)
Amine Concentration (molality) Remaining Amine Peak () Total Area Retention ()
PZ 3.5 100 100
DGA 7 93 98
MDEA 50 wt 71 97
AMP 3 97 96
EDA 3.5 64 91
MEA 7 76 80
DETA 2.3 9 71
HEEDA 3.5 3 17
27MDEA after 4wks at 135oC
MDEA
28HEEDA after 4wks at 135oC
HEEDA
29Amine Screening Conclusions
- HEEDA degrades very quickly compared to other
amines studied - Industrially MDEA does not significantly degrade
but this study shows it does shift to other
amines - Arm shifting
- Higher activation energy than other amines so
increased temperature might effect more - Order from least to most degradation
- PZltDGAlt MDEAlt AMPltEDAlt MEAlt DETAlt HEEDA
30Future Work
- Mechanistic model for MEA degradation
- MEA with spikes of various degradation products
to determine k values for reactions - Measure HEIA formation with HPLC for low temp
samples to get a more accurate degradation rate - Thermal Degradation modeling in ASPEN
- Various stripper configurations
- Possible reclaiming simulations as well
31Summary
- Thermal degradation can be important in the
overall cost of the MEA absorber/stripper system - Engineering controls can keep these costs
reasonable - Further study of the reclaiming system is needed
- PZ does not thermally degrade by itself, but does
in the presence of alkanolamines - Many common amines do degrade under stripper
conditions and this should be considered when
choosing a solvent
32QUESTIONS?