Thermal cracking is well known and widely accepted technology for olefin production. This technology is also called steam cracking, since steam is added to hydrocacbon before cracking to reduce the parial pressure of hydrocacbon and to produce a better yield performance. In the petrochemical industry, steam cracking is a core technology for producing olefins, although there are alternative routes from off-gas of fluid catalvtic cracking units in oil refineries or by dehydrogenation or prepane or outanes. Thermal cracking reactions are bisically uses to break the C – C bonds of hydrocacbons non-catalytically at high temperature of around 800 – 9000C and at a low pressure of 0.16 – 0.2Mpa in the coils located in the radiant sections of furnaces. They finally produce lower molecular weight olefins. In including radical reactions, whereas gas oil cracking is more complex with more than 3000 reactions.
Naphtha Cracking Thermal cracking is well known and widely accepted technology for olefin production. This technology is also called steam cracking, since steam is added to hydrocacbon before cracking to reduce the parial pressure of hydrocacbon and to produce a better yield performance. In the petrochemical industry, steam cracking is a core technology for producing olefins, although there are alternative routes from off-gas of fluid catalvtic cracking units in oil refineries or by dehydrogenation or prepane or outanes. Thermal cracking reactions are bisically uses to break the C – C bonds of hydrocacbons non-catalytically at high temperature of around 800 – 900 0 C and at a low pressure of 0.16 – 0.2Mpa in the coils located in the radiant sections of furnaces. They finally produce lower molecular weight olefins. In including radical reactions, whereas gas oil cracking is more complex with more than 3000 reactions. In industrial practie, non-reaced ethane or propane is separated in the cold separation sestion and recycled back to cracking furnaces where ethane and propane are cracked again. Therefore, the ultimate yields of olefins are much higher than those of once-through yields. I.1.1. Petrochemical complex in Japan. Naphtha is used asa base feedstock for petrochemical complexes in Japan. LPG is also used as an alternative feedstock, but accounts for about 60% of such feedstock and the rest of the feedstock are LPG and gas oil. 1 However, in the United States, ethane and LPG separated from natural gas are major feedstock, which are for 70 – 80% of total demand, while the rest are naphtha and gas oil. Based on naphtha cracking, the product pattern consists of ethylene at 28%, propylene at 17%, butene and butadiene products at 11%, off-gas and pyrolysis heavy oil at 24% and pyrolysis gasoline at 20%. A typical petrochemical complex consists of an ethylene plants such as polyolefin and aromatic plants using olefin products. The configuration of the complex depends on the final product types and the available feedstock. A complex based on naphtha-cracking ethylene plants is more elaborate than a complex based on cracking gases such as ethane or propane. Some 60 – 70% of pyrolsis gasoline fractions consist of aromatic such as benzene, toluene and xylenes called a BTX fraction. These are recovered by extractive separations at 12 – 14% based on the feedstock rate. However, in the recent product pattern, the BTX extraction rate tends to decrease due to advances in cracking technology and a parafinic and lighter naphtha used as the feedstock. In the 1970s, about 50% of BTX demand was supplied from ethylene plants; however, in the 1990s, this has decreased to 40%. The rest of BTX demand is supplied from catalytic naphtha reforming plants. I.1.2Cracking furnace for naphtha. Feed naphtha is preheated at the converstion section of a cracking furnace and introduced to the radiation coils, togerther with dilution steam when the naphtha is to thermally cracked into olefin fractions. I.1.2.1. Type of Cracking furnace. 2 As shown in Figure for a typical configuration of the cracking furnace, it is generally designed as a fire-box type which can be grouped into several sub-types with regard to radiant coils and burner types. In particular, with increasing capacity of the cracking furnace and requirement of high severty operation, the accurate control of heat flux in the radiant coils is important. This is attained by using both floor burners and either radiant wall or stage burners. Fuel gas is mainly used for firing, but fuel oil is also used in some cases. Cracking reactions ocurs in the radiant coils, and the convection section is used for heat recovery by feed preheating, steam superheating and boiler feed-water preheating. To avoid overcracking of reacted gas, tranfers line exchanges for rapid cooling are installed just at the exit of the radiant coil. The radiant coils are generally located in a single row. The burners are placed on the floor and side wall, or only on the floor. A long-flame type is used for the floor burners, and the flame pattern is formed upward in parallel with the radiant coils. The side wall burners are generally the radiant wall type and are located at several stages every 1–2 metres. Several sets of side wall burners with long and oval flame may also be installed at the terrace of the radiant wall. The use of side wall burners makes it possible to achieve an accurate control of the heat flux over the radiant coils. I.1.2.2. Radiant Tube and Coil. In the early days, horizontal straight radiant coils were used, connected with bends at their ends. A long with the temperature rose higher. It caused the defiection of coils so that it was difficult to support the coils horizontally. The coil was therefore set vertically and suspended from the ceiling. 3 Obtaining better olefin yields requires a short residence time, so coil diameter has been reduced and coil length shortened. The inner diameter of the coil has been reduced to 40 – 50 mm and the length is now about 10 – 20 metres. Typical coil arrangements are shown in Figure With respect to coil materials, HK- 40 or Incoloy 800 was previously used. With the increase in the severity of operating conditions, the coil skin temperature has risen higher to about 1100 0 C. Keeping coil life longer reqiures carburization-resistance material, and high chomium and high nickel materials with the addition of tungsten, molybdenum or nicbium have been developed ( refer to Table ). The radiant coils are mainly manufactured by a centrifugal casting divots. This cause the acceleration of carburization. So machining on the inner surface requires removal of casting divots, particularly on the surface of the exit part operated at the highest temperature. Wrought coils have been developed to overome this casting defeet. I.1.3. TREATMENT OF A CRACKED GAS. An ethylene process consists of a hot section, meluding cracking furnace, a heat recovery of cracked gas, and a cold section to separate into ethylene, propyiene and other olefin products. The hot section generally consists of the units shown in Figure… Cracked gas is quenched by a series of transfer line exchangers to recover heat and to terminate cracking reactions. The exchangers generate high- presure steam ( about 10Mpa and 500 0 C). Cracked gas is further cooled down in the oil quench tower and the water quench tower, where several levels of heat are recovered. The gas from the top of the water quench tower enters the four to six stage cracking gas compressor to pressurize from 40 – 50kPa to 3 – 3.5 Mpa. In the compression stages H 2 S and CO 2 are removed from cracked gas by treating caustic soda. The gas is then 4 dried and sent to the cold section, which can be divided into two configurations: the front-end demethanizing system and the front-end depropanzing system. These systems are shown in Figures…… Acetylene as the by-product is a catalyst poison for downstream polyethylene productions, so it needs to be removed either by hydrogenation or absorption. Acetylene concentration is up to about 1.5% by volume in an ethylene and ethane mixture in the front-end demethanizing system. Accordingly, controlling the temperature on hydrogenation is relatively difficult. However, the recent advances on the catalyst improve the reaction performance such as the selectivity of acetylene hydrogenation. This hydrogenation system is called back-end hydrogenation because the reactor is sited after the dementhannizer. To moderate the reaction and increase selectivity, carbon monxide may be added the moderator. However, if high-purity ethylene is required, carbon monoxide is sometimes not used. On the other hand, in the front-end demethanizer system, the hydrogenation reactor is sited before the demethanizer, and this system is called front-end hydregenation. In this case, the acetylene content is relatively low and the hydrogenation reaction is milder than that of the back-end hydrogenation. Hydrogen is contained in the cracked gas, so an additional supply of hydrogen is usually not necessary. Carbon monoxide is also contained in the gas and may improve reaction selectivity. However, the reaction conditions are subject to change due to the furnace operations and hence the cracked gas compositions. I.1.4. QUENCH AND HEAT RECOVERY. The purposes of the quencher are to terminate the cracking reactions and to prevent the formation of the heavy materals by polymerization, and to 5 recover energy at a high temperature. Generally, cracked gas is quenched by the transfer line exchangers, which are directly connected to the radiant coil exit and generate high pressure steam. In th case of naphtha or gas oil feedstock, cracked gas may be condensed in the exchanger if the quench temperature is too low. The condensed liquid will accelerate the fouling rate. Therefore, the quench temperature is kept higher and the heat recovery is limited. In the case of ethane or propan cracking, as less heavier materials are formed by cracking reactions, it is possible to lower the condensing temperature. As the fouling rate may be suppressed, heat is recovered effectively in the transfer line exchangers. Therefore, an oil quench tower is usually not required. Cracked gas from the transfer line exchangers then enters the oil and water quench towers, and further heat is recovered. At the oil quench tower, cracked gas is cooled down from about 350 0 C to 100 0 C by direct contact with quench oil. Quench oil is supplied at about 100 0 C, and the quench oil temperature is controlled at the bottom of the tower to below about 190 0 C to avoid polymerization. However, for heat recovery, a high temperature is more efficient. If the temperature is too high, it tends to accelerate polymerization. Therefore, an optimal temperature should be selected such as 190 0 C. Heat is recoverd by generating the dilution steam required for cracking. The purpose of dilution steam is to reduce the partial pressure of hydrocacbons and to facilitate cracking reactions. The heat is also used as reboiler heat in downstream separators. At the water quench tower, heat is recovered at the relatively low temperature of 80 – 90 0 C and is used mainly as reboiler heats for propylene and propane and other similar separations. 6 In order to get better olefin yields, the pressure of the cracking reactions is kept as low as possible. On the other hand, the lower suction pressure of the cracked gas compressor requires more power. Therefore, the coil outlet pressure can be lowered only by reducing the pressure drop between the coil outlet and the suction of the cracked gas compressor. It is important to minimize pressure drops in the transfer line exchangers, the oil quench tower and the water quench tower, for high olefin yields. The coil outlet pressure is mostly designed at 0.16 – 0.2 Mpa. Figure… shows typical types of tranfers line exchangers, which can be divided into a double-tube exchanger type and a shell-and-tube exchanger type. Generally, the double-tube exchangers are followed by a shell-and- tube exchanger. During operation, fouling of the transfer line exchanger tubes will gradually increase and energy efficiency will drop accordingly. Therefore, easy cleaning of exchanger tubes is needed. The double-tube type has the advantage of easy cleaning, but the shell-and-tube type can also be mdified for easier cleaning. Other design criteria are intended to release heat stress, prevent erosion or maintain a low pressure drop. I.1.5. THERMODYNAMICS OF THERMAL CRACKING REACTIONS. Cracking reactions break the C – C bond of hydrocacbon at a high temperature (800 ÷ 900 0 C) and low pressure (0.16 – 0.2Mpa) non- catalytically. A large positive value of the Gibbs free energy means that a system is not stable thermodynamically. According to the standard Gibbs energy of formation per carbon atom for various materials as shown in Figure…, each hydrocacbon tends to be cracked down into hydrogen and carbon atoms. 7 Therefore, cracking reactions should be terminated by rapid quench control, and residence time kept short to avoid overcracking. This gives higher yields can be predicted quantitatively by a simulator based on the dynamic reaction model for many elementary reactions. But, the following can be explained qualititaitvely by reforring to Figure…. As the cracking temperature increases: (1) pyrolysis of paraffins proceeds. (2) More ethylene than propylene is produced. (3) More acetylene is produced. (4) More hydrogen and carbon deposition are produced,and (5) Bezene and naphthalene production tends to increase gradually. I.1.6. MECHANISM OF THERMAL CRACKING. Components meluded in cracking reactions are so many and reaction paths are also so compheated that the… theoretically yet. However, Rice and Herzfield first imtrojuced a free radical chain reaction machanism. The mechanism has been modified several times by many researchers and is widely accepted as the basis for explaining the mechanism of the cracking reactions. I.1.6.1. Free radical chain reaction Mechanism. Free radical chain reactions can be divided into three reaction steps, namely initiation, propagation and termination. (1) Inititation. The reaction is initiated thermally, and pyrolysis initiation of a higher paraflin is caused by homolytic cleavage of a carbon – carbon bond and a carbon – hydrogen bond. It forms free radicals into the reaction system. (a) Cleavage of carbon – carbon bond 8 C n+m H 2m+2n+2 C n H 0 2n+1 + C m H 0 2m+1 (b) Hydrogen transfer between paraffins and olefins C n H 2n+2 + C m H 2m C n H 0 2n+1 + (c) Cleavage of C – H bonds. C n H 2n+2 C n H 0 2n+1 + H 0 Generally, larger moleculer weight compounds have less activation energy per carbon bonds and can be reacted more easily. C – C bond energy per molecule is about 300kj/mol, which is less than that of C – H bonds of 420kj/mol. Therefore, C – C bonds are less stable than C – H bonds. The chain reaction is mainly initiated with the cleavage of the C – C bond that releases two sets of radicals. (2) Propagation of free radical chain reactions (a) Abstraction of hydrogen C n H 0 2n+1 + C m H 2m+2 C n H 2n+2 + C m H 0 2m+1 (b) Decomposition of radical C n+m H 0 2n +2m+1 C n H 2n + C m H 0 2m+1 (c) Addition of radical C n H 0 2n+1 + C m H 2m C n+m H 0 2n +2m+1 Hydrogen abstraction by radicals is an interimolecular and radical- exchange reaction. The low molecular radicals (i.e CH º 3 or H º ) tend to abstract hydrogen radicals from hydrocacbons with relatively lower energy. The activation energy of this hydrogen abstraction is estimated as about 30kj/mol The radicals generated by hydrogen abstraction are far less stable than the feed hydrocacbons and are casily decomposed into lower molecular olefins and radicals. The activation energy of the 9 decomposition is estimated as about 120 – 210 kj/mol, and the lower molecular radicals have a relatively larger activation energy. Due to the above reasons, larger molecular paraffins are gradually decomposed into lower molecular olefins. (3) Termination The radicals generatd by the above reactions may react with each other and may disappar. Termination of radicals is. C n H 0 2n+1 + C m H 0 2m +1 C n+m H 2n +2m+2 The radicals activation energy of this reaction is so small as to be negligible. The activation energy of the overall reactions proceeding with the above three steps is theoretically expected to be 230 – 270 kj/mol. The smaller molecular weight of hydrocacbon has the larger activation energy. This figure is smaller than the activation energy of C – C bond decomposition of 330 kj/mol and than agrees with the apparent average activation energy acquired by experiment for various hydrocacbons. I.1.6.2. Intramolecular Decomposition. In thermal cracking reactions, the following well known reactions, which cannot be classified as free radical reactions or decomposition of a carbonium ion, occur intramolecularly, and are so called concerted reactions: 1 – pentane C 2 H 4 + C 3 H 6 Cyclohexene C 2 H 4 + C 4 H 8 10