Profitable Calcining of Non-Calcinable Pet Coke
Profitable Calcining of Non-Calcinable Pet Coke
Profitable Calcining of Non-Calcinable Pet Coke
Dr. Ulrich Mannweiler, Mannweiler Consulting, Zrich, Switzerland Werner K. Fischer and Raymond Perruchoud, R&D Carbon Ltd., Sierre, Switzerland Age de Vries, RDS Development & Services, Manama, Bahrain (In cooperation with CHALIECO, Beijing)
Abstract
The requirement for anode grade petroleum coke is constantly growing. World wide sulfur and metal contents are increasing making it difficult for the industry to produce anodes with acceptable quality. A considerable amount of the World production of green coke, which has acceptable properties in terms of impurities, is very fine and has high amounts of Volatile Combustible Matters (VCM). Such coke can not be calcined in rotary kilns since productivity is reduced and quality of the calcined coke is unsatisfactory. Large quantities of coke with low metal and sulfur contents are burned as fuel material. China, Brazil, Argentina and Indonesia e.g. have increasing quantities of such coke available. Only China is using it for calcination by applying the Shaft Kiln Technology, a technology developed in Europe some seventy years ago which got totally forgotten in the Western calcining industry. Hundreds of shaft kilns are operated in China. The technology is very simple and requires very little maintenance. The process is energy self sufficient. During calcination low loss of solid materials occurs resulting in a yield (dry basis) of 85 % (75 - 78 % for rotary kiln) and therefore CO2 emission is 40 % lower. Twenty six million tons with higher purities (< 3% S) are used by the aluminum industry, TiO2 production or as needle coke for steel electrodes. Besides of the impurities, the content of Volatile Combustible Matters (VCM) as well as the grain size are important factors for the calcination process. Very fine material with higher VCMs is not calcinable in rotary kilns, even if the impurity level would be acceptable. Approximately five million tons of such material is calcined in China in so called shaft kilns and another five million tons are regrettably burned. This potentially good green coke available e.g. in Brazil, Argentina, Indonesia could also be calcined, if shaft kiln technology would be introduced outside of China. In Table 1 the properties of green coke for shaft kiln calcination versus Rotary Kiln calcination are compared.
Property Water content VCM HGI Sizing: > 16 mm > 4 mm < 1 mm Unit % % % % % Shaft Kiln 1-8 10 - 16 80 - 120 5 - 20 30 - 55 20 - 40 Rotary Kiln 5 - 10 8 - 12 70 - 90 25 - 35 45 - 60 10 - 20
As can be seen in shaft kilns very fine material with higher VCMs can be calcined which can not be calcined in rotary kilns where VCMs are limited to 12 %. Todays trend in the refining industry is to increase the throughput of the delayed coking unit by reducing the cycle time. The result is that green coke will be fine and high in VCM and thus only calcinable in shaft kilns.
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in 18 30 hours where it finally reaches the cooling zone. With indirect water cooling a coke discharge temperature of 60 C is reached. Process Conditions In Table 2 the major process parameters of a shaft kiln are compared with a rotary kiln.
Process Conditions Heat-up rate Residence time Max. coke temperature Max. off-gas velocity Max. grain motion Yiled:dryfeed calcined CO2 emission Unit C/min h C m/s m/h % Shaft Kiln 1 18 - 30 1'250 1 0.3 85 0.6
Rotary Kiln
tCO2/tCPC
The main components of a shaft kiln are the vertical shafts which are heated on two sides by combustion channels equipped with baffles, similar to the flues in anode baking furnaces. In these combustion channels the volatiles are burned. An under pressure is maintained and the volatiles flow along the baffles in a downward serpentine manner. Controlled amounts of air are introduced in the flues to burn the volatiles and maintain the required temperature profile. No auxiliary fuel is required to calcine the coke. Green coke crushed to size (< 70mm) is continuously fed on top of the shafts and is heated indirectly by the flues on both sides of the kiln. The green coke firstly passes through the preheating zone to remove moisture and some part of the volatiles. Devolatilization occurs between 500C and 1000 C. Some of the volatiles are condensing inside the shafts on the cooler coke grains and glue those to larger compact lumps together. In the Calcining Zone, where the highest temperatures in the flue reaches 1250 1380C further dehydrogenation, some desulphurization and coke shrinkage (densification) takes place. The coke moves through heated part of the the kiln
The shaft kiln process is characterized by its slow movement of the coke through the kiln and the slow heat-up rate. As practically no coke grains are burned or carried over into the flues the yield of the shaft kiln process is 10% higher than in rotary kilns, where considerable amounts of fine particles are entrained and burned with the offgases in the incineration chamber. Thanks to the slow coke movement a 100 C lower calcination temperature is possible resulting in lower desulphurization rates, less NOx formation and a 40 % lower CO2 emission, as no additional fuel is needed and no coke grains are burned. Resulting Calcined Coke Quality In Table 3 the calcined coke properties are compared between the two technologies.
Property Sizing: > 4 mm > 1 mm < 0.25 mm Unit % % %
kg/dm3
Shaft Kiln 45 - 70 75 - 85 2-5 0.64 - 0.70 0.76 - 0.89 0.82 - 0.89 0.85 - 0.90 75 - 90 2.08 - 2.12 28 - 35 380 - 500
Rotary Kiln 30 - 45 60 - 75 5 - 10 0.62 - 0.70 0.78 - 0.86 0.83 - 0.92 0.86 - 0.93 70 - 85 2.05 - 2.10 25 - 32 460 - 540
Bulk Density 8 - 4 mm 2 - 1 mm 1 - 0.5 mm 0.5 - 0.25 mm Grain Stabiliy Density in Xylene Crystallite Size Spec.electr. resistance
%
kg/dm3
m
There are no big property differences to be observed except for the sizing. Real densities are similar or even slightly higher with slightly larger crystallite sizes. -2-
It has to be remembered, that the green coke input in a shaft kiln is much finer than that for a rotary kiln. In spite of this the produced calcined coke is very coarse, as can be seen in Figure 2 below.
Plant Lay out A 500000 tpy plant requires a total surface of 240000 m2. The 16 kilns are arranged side by side with a space between the kilns. A typical lay-out as shown in Figure 3 consist of the 16 kilns, the longitudinal blending bed for green coke blending and storing and calcined coke storage silos of a size of 20000 tons each.
As explained earlier, during the calcination process volatiles condense in the cooler part of the shaft and glue the fine green coke particles together resulting in big lumps. They are calcined on their way through the kiln resulting in very coarse coke grains at the calciner outlet.
Material Handling Green coke of the selected quality is conveyed from the harbor at a rate of 650 tph to the plant. The Longitudinal Blending Bed, equipped with a travelling stacker and a bridge reclaimer is the ideal way of using a storage system for energyefficient homogenization. In the chevron mode, the stockpile is formed by the stacker operating along the entire length of the bed while discharging the material. Each layer of material is discharged on top of another until full height of the stockpile has been reached. The system allows operation of the stacker and reclaimer in separate areas of the stockpile. Inclined or horizontal chain reclaimers retrieve the material from a harrow that is designed for the full height of the stockpile face. The harrow creates a cascading effect of the material down the face of the stockpile to the drag chain reclaimers, thoroughly mixing the different layers within the pile. During the time one stockpile is filled with different qualities, the other pile is reclaimed and fed directly to the shaft calciner. The Blending Bed Technology is very well suited, when only one quality has to be produced. In case, several qualities need to be made the Compartmental Blending as often used by the industry is the better option; however it is higher in investment.
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Blending Scenario When comparing the calcined coke specifications from four Middle East Smelters they are more or less similar. The chemical specifications can only be reached, when adequate green coke blends can be made. The following blend with one Brazilian, one higher and one lower sulfur Chinese coke allows producing a calcined coke as specified by the smelters.
Green Coke %
Investment and Operating Cost Comparison Table 6 compares major cost components between the two technologies for a 500000 tpy calciner.
500'000 tpy Calciner Investment Production Cost Green coke required Utilities Labour Maintenance mat. Miscellaneous Capital cost Shaft Kiln 300 - 500 $/t 585'000 t No add. fuel same Lower Same Lower Rotary Kiln 500 - 750 $/t 640'000 t Fuel needed same Higher Same higher
Na 70 50 50 65 75
100
50 25 25
CPC production cost ~25 % lower for shaft than rotary kiln
Conclusion
Shaft kiln technology allows calcination of fine and High VCM green coke producing a coarse CPC with a high bulk density. Shaft kilns have a high availability (> 99%) and a life time of 8 years with very little maintenance! During calcination, low losses of solid material occurs resulting in a yield of 85 %; no incinerator required (positive impact on NOx emissions!). The process is energy self sufficient and needs no additional energy input. CO2 emission is 40 % lower than in rotary kilns (Trade possibility for CO2 Emission Certificates)! Heat recuperation is possible depending on economy (steam, power or desalination). Comparable specific investment and production cost is 25 % lower than rotary kiln. For more information contact:
R&D Carbon Ltd. P.O. Box 362, CH-3960 Sierre, Switzerland
All three green cokes have VCM contents of 10 14 % and are very fine. As show above such cokes after calcination have excellent physical properties that meet the requirements (high bulk and real density, low electrical resistivity, coarse material etc.) of the smelters. Calcination At a rate of 120 kg/h green coke is fed individually to each shaft and flows slowly through it and passes through the devolatilization zone and the calcination zone where it reaches the final calcining temperature of 1250 C in about 18hours. At the bottom of each shaft the coke is indirectly cooled and is discharged into a vibratory conveyor from where it is transferred with the central conveyor to the calcined coke silo and later to the harbor for loading the ships for customers. Operational Performance A shaft kiln is an easy to operate tool. Table 5 compares some operational aspects.
Property
Availability Downtime per year Refractory maintenance Mech/electr. maintenance Fuel requirement Combustion Loss Manpower requirement
Shaft Kiln > 99 % none in 8 years practically none very little no fuel addition volatiles only 100/500'000 tpa
Rotary Kiln 90 % 2 - 3 weeks considerable considerable 1 GJ/t CPC volatiles & coke 100/500'000 tpa
www.rd-carbon.com
Mannweiler Consulting Hadlaubstrasse 71, CH-8006 Zrich, Switzerland Phone: +4144 350 46 62, Fax: +41 44 350 46 61 [email protected] www.mannweiler.ch
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