Sulfur_Sulfuric Acid Industry

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    C H E M I C A L P R O C E S S T E C H N O L O G Y

    C H E C 3 2 2

    SULFUR & SULFURIC ACID

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    Sulfur (S)

    INTRODUCTION :

    1. Basic raw material for production of sulfuric acid.

    2. Propertieso

    Atomic weight 32. 07.o Bright yellow crystalline solid.

    o Physical state : (Solid) pure element and as sulfide and sulfate minerals.

    3. Specific gravity- 1.803, insoluble in water, soluble in organic solvents.

    4. Uses

    o 80-90 % used for sulfuric acid manufacture.

    o Precursor to other chemicals (sulfites and sulfates)

    o Direct use for vulcanization of rubber

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    Process Selection

    CLASSIFICATION OF MANUFACTURING PROCESS

    1. Frasch process: Elemental sulfur mining

    2. Claus Process: Oxidationreduction of hydrogen sulfide

    3. Finnish process: elemental sulfur from pyrites

    INDIAN SCENARIO

    India is practically devoid of deposits of elemental sulfur.

    Increasing demand of natural gas has given a boost to the sulfur-recovery

    aspect of natural gas.

    Petroleum refinery stream is also a source of H2S.

    Iron pyrite (sulfides of iron) availability : Important deposits of pyrites are

    those of Amjhore in Rohtas (Bihar).

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    SULFUR FROM SOUR NATURAL GAS (CLAUS PROCESS)

    OXIDATION-REDUCTION OF H2S

    Raw material :

    H2S from natural gas and petroleum refinery

    AMINE ABSORPTION PROCESS FOR HYDROGEN SULFIDE REMOVAL

    Sulfur recovery from sour natural gas is

    conducted in two stages:

    [1] Scrubbing the gas with an amine

    solution (Methyl-diethanolamine MDEA)

    [2] Recovery of solvent (by indirect heating)

    * Process is known as sweetening of

    Natural gas.

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    Chemical reactions

    [1] First reaction: simple combustion of H2S stream in air, carriedout in waste heat boiler to capture heat evolved as steam.

    2H2S + 3O2 2SO2 + 2H2O; Ho = -247.89 Kcal

    [2] Second reaction (catalytic)

    4H2S + 2SO2 6S (v) + 4H2O; Ho = - 42.24 Kcal

    100

    Catalyst: Al2O3 (Alumina) / Iron Oxide H2S% conversion

    Equilibrium curve 50

    100 300 500 T ( C)

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    Process flow sheet

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    Major engineering problems

    1. Two stage reactor design for exothermic SO2 oxidation

    of H2S. 70-80 % conversion in first stage at 300-400 C

    range followed by 250-300 C operation in secondreactor to obtain favorable equilibrium.

    2. Heat exchange for molten sulfur handling.

    3. Corrosion

    4. Final clean up of stack gases.

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    Possible solutions

    Multistage operation

    If the sulfur vapor from the one stage is condensed out, andthe residual gases are blended with further hydrogen sulfideand passed over catalyst, the equilibrium conversion of 94-

    95% can be obtained. Effluent gas from a single stage may contains 2-3% SO2, which

    would represent both loss of feedstock and emission problem.

    Need to look at equilibrium data and catalyst for deciding

    temperature range.

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    SULFURIC ACID(H2SO4)

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    Properties Highly corrosive strong

    mineral acid, molecular wt :98, MP :10.5 oC, BP : 340oC

    Colorless to slightly yellowviscous liquid

    Soluble in water at allconcentrations.

    The corrosiveness of it is

    mainly due to its strongacidic nature, strongdehydrating property and itsconcentrated strongoxidizing property.

    Commercially produced invarious acid strength 33.33 to 114.6 wt%

    Strength over 100% referred asOleum

    Applications Lead acid batteries for cars

    and other vehicles Mineral processing Fertilizer manufacturing Oil refineries Wastewater processing Chemical synthesis.

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    CHAMBER PROCESS CONTACT PROCESS

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    Developed first, produced acidof concentration less than 80%

    Used a homogeneous catalyst(nitrogen oxide)

    Used for producing sulfuricacid

    Virtually obsolete : corrosion oflead, absorption of NO2 gas

    Yield 98% H2SO4 and higher

    Originally used a supportedplatinum catalyst, but laterreplaced by a supportedvanadium catalyst

    Far more economical processfor producing sulfur trioxide

    and concentrated sulfuric acid

    Current process with someadvances (DCDA)

    Classification of Processes

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    CONTACT PROCESS

    Reactions:[1] Sulfur is burned to produce sulfur dioxide and heat.

    S(s) + O2 (g) SO2(g) H = -70.9 kcal

    ** Sulfur dioxide may also be obtained via oxidation of pyrites or fromother smelter source. Dust removal equipment add the capital cost

    for these secondary sources.

    [2] The second reaction, oxidation of sulfur dioxide to sulfur trioxide withair (less exothermic, equilibrium reaction)

    V2O5

    SO2 (g) + O2 (g)

    SO3(g) H = -23 kcal

    [3]Adsorption of formed SO3 in water

    SO3(g) + H2O(l) H2SO4(l) H = -31 kcal

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    Catalyst:(Speeds up the reaction but not consumed in reaction)

    Formation of sulfur trioxide is catalyzed by 6-10% vanadium pentaoxide (V2O5)

    coating. Platinum would be a more suitable (more active) catalyst, but it is very costly

    and easily poisoned.

    Supported on a powdered or porous carrier Provide large surface area

    Resistance to process gases at high temperature

    Examples- alumina, silica gel, kieselghur, pumice.

    Promoted by alkali and/or metallic compounds Example-potassium hydroxide

    Below 400 C the V2O5 is inactive as a catalyst, and above 620 C it begins tobreak down

    Catalyst deactivation: Life of modern vanadium/potassium catalyst : 5-20 years

    Purification of air and SO2 is necessary to avoid catalyst poisoning (ie. removingcatalytic activities). The gas is then washed with water and dried by H2SO4

    Regular screening of catalyst ( 1 year). Temperature limitation.

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    Thermodynamics & Kinetics Considerations:

    The equilibrium for a gas phase reaction can be expressed in partial pressures:Kp=PSO3/(PSO2 . P

    1/2O2)

    At 400C, equilibrium conversion is 96%. But the time required for reaction (2nd)

    is long, which require a large reactor and catalyst volume. For process optimization

    Multistage bed (3 or more catalyst bed)Starting with very fast reaction rates at 550-600 C with 60-65% conversion.Cooling of gas mixture at 400-450 C, for more favorable equilibriumPass over three or more beds to reached about97-98% conversion to SO3.

    Air can be added at this stage to assist in displacing the equilibrium furtherright. It is expected under pressure equilibrium of the reaction more to the right

    But it has not worth the additional capital cost required at high pressureCorrosion problem

    T(C) 400 500 600 700 800 900

    Kp 397 48.1 9.53 2.63 0.915 0.384

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    Process Description1. Burning an atomized jet of filtered molten sulfur in a stream of dry air (7-10 % SO2

    and 11-1 4% O2).2. A fire tube boiler is used to reduce gas temperature to the 400 to 240 C range,

    simultaneously generating steam.

    3. Next gas mixture sent to first catalyst bed of two-stage catalytic converter with 80%conversion and raising temperature upto 600 C.

    4. The conveter product is cooled to 300 C and fed to second stage, where yieldincreased by 97% by operating at 400-450 C. Small amount of dry air at ambienttemperature can also be used to bring the temperature down.

    5. The sulfur trioxide concentration at this stage is about 10% by volume. After coolingto 150 C by water and air heat exchanger and absorbed in oleum (fed at a rate to

    allow not over 1% rise in acid strength).6. Final srcubbing is done with a lower strength acid (97%).

    Alternatively:5. Hot sulfur trioxide passes through the heat exchanger and is dissolved in

    concentrated H2SO4 in the absorption tower to form oleum:H

    2SO

    4(l) + SO

    3(g) H

    2S

    2O

    7(l)

    6. Oleum is reacted with water to form concentrated H2SO4.H2S2O7(l) + H2O(l) 2 H2SO4(l)

    **Note that directly dissolving SO3 in water is impractical due to the highly exothermicnature of the reaction. Acidic vapor or mists are formed instead of a liquid.

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    H2SO4 PRODUCTION

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    H2SO4 PRODUCTION

    Major Engineering problems:

    1. Design of multistage catalytic convertor for a highly exothermic reactions.

    ( 3 or more stages)

    2. Optimization of space velocity in catalyst chamber i.e pumping cost vs fixed

    charge of reactor.3. Corrosion problem : Equilibrium yield can be increased by system pressure

    but increases compression cost and corrosion dictates low pressure.

    4. Adaptation of process to various gas feeds

    5. Yield drops due to longitudinal mixing if gas velocity is too low.

    6. Removal of heat of absorption of SO3 in acid. Pipe coolers with waterdripping over external surface have been replaced by cast iron pipe with

    internal fins to promote better heat transfer.

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    Contact process for making oleum and H2SO4

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