| 3840750 | PLASMA APPARATUS FOR CARRYING OUT HIGH TEMPERATURE CHEMICAL REACTIONS | Davis et al. | 250/547 | |
| 3914573 | Coating heat softened particles by projection in a plasma stream of Mach 1 to Mach 3 velocity | Muehlberger | 219/76 | |
| 3954954 | Plasma method and apparatus for carrying out high temperature chemical reactions | Davis et al. | 423/492 | |
| 4022872 | Process for preparing finely-divided refractory powders | Carson et al. | 423/297 | |
| 4080194 | Titanium or zirconium reduction process by arc heater | Fey | 75/10R | |
| 4107445 | Titanium and zirconium production by arc heater | Wolf et al. | 13/2P | |
| 4145403 | Arc heater method for producing metal oxides | Fey et al. | 423/613 | |
| 4164553 | Plasma arc process for the production of chemical products in power form | Perugini et al. | 423/440 | |
| 4335080 | Apparatus for producing selective particle sized oxide | Davis et al. | 422/244 | |
| 4347060 | Method for making antimony trioxide powder | Blizzard et al. | 23/294R | |
| 4356029 | Titanium product collection in a plasma reactor | Down et al. | 75/.5B | |
| 4410358 | Plasma recovery of tin from smelter dust | Heshmatpour | 75/10R | |
| 4561883 | Method of producing metals or metal alloys and an arrangement therefor | Mullner et al. | 75/10.19 | |
| 4610718 | Method for manufacturing ultra-fine particles | Araya et al. | 75/.5C | |
| 4731111 | Hydrometallurical process for producing finely divided spherical refractory metal based powders | Kopatz et al. | 75/.5AB | |
| 4762756 | Thermochemical surface treatments of materials in a reactive gas plasma | Bergmann et al. | 428/698 | |
| 4772315 | Hydrometallurgical process for producing finely divided spherical maraging steel powders containing readily oxidizable alloying elements | Johnson et al. | 75/.5AA | |
| 4783216 | Process for producing spherical titanium based powder particles | Kemp et al. | 75/.5BB | |
| 4801435 | Hybrid plasma reactor | Jozef | 422/186.04 | |
| 4875810 | Apparatus for controlling fine particle flow | Chiba et al. | 406/14 | |
| 4891066 | Highly pure titanium | Shimotori et al. | 75/84 | |
| 4909914 | Reaction apparatus which introduces one reacting substance within a convergent-divergent nozzle | Chiba et al. | 204/164 | |
| 4911805 | Apparatus and process for producing a stable beam of fine particles | Kenji et al. | 204/164 | |
| 5017754 | Plasma reactor used to treat powder material at very high temperatures | Drouet et al. | 219/121.36 | |
| 5028417 | Sunscreen compositions | Gulguhji et al. | 424/59 | |
| 5062936 | Method and apparatus for manufacturing ultrafine particles | Beaty et al. | 204/164 | |
| 5073193 | Method of collecting plasma synthesize ceramic powders | Chaklader et al. | 75/346 | |
| 5194128 | Method for manufacturing ultrafine particles | Beaty et al. | 204/164 | |
| 5215749 | Cosmetic composition | Nicoll et al. | 424/401 | |
| 5257500 | Aircraft engine ignition system | Kattalaicheri et al. | 60/39.821 | |
| 5294242 | Method for making metal powders | Zurecki et al. | 75/345 | |
| 5935293 | Fast quench reactor method | Detering et al. | 75/10.19 |
The United States Government has rights in this invention disclosed under contract number DE-AC07-76ID01570 between the U.S. Department of Energy and EG&G Idaho, Inc., now contract number DE-AC07-94ID13223 with Lockheed Idaho Technologies Company.
This disclosure pertains to equipment for thermal conversion of reactants to desired end products, which might be either a gas or ultrafine solid particles. It also relates specifically to methods for effectively producing such end products.
The present rector and method are intended for high temperature reactions that require rapid cooling to freeze the reaction products to prevent back reactions or decompositions to undesirable products. They use adiabatic and isentropic expansion of gases in a converging-diverging nozzle for rapid quenching. This expansion can result in cooling rates exceeding 10
The concepts of this reactor were originally developed in a study of hydrogen reduction of titanium tetrachloride. When the concept was found to provide the high quench rates required to produce titanium, the concept was then applied to other processes requiring rapid quenching, including conversion of methane to acetylene.
Titanium's properties of high corrosion resistance and strength, combined with its relatively low density, result in titanium alloys being ideally suited to many high technology applications, particularly in aerospace systems. Applications of titanium in chemical and power plants are also attractive.
Unfortunately, the widespread use of titanium has been severely limited by its high cost. The magnitude of this cost is a direct consequence of the batch nature of the conventional Kroll and Hunter processes for metal production, as well as the high energy consumption rates required by their usage.
The large scale production processes used in the titanium industry have been relatively unchanged for many years. They involve the following essential steps: (1) Chlorination of impure oxide ore, (2) purification of TiCl
One of the most promising techniques currently undergoing development to circumvent the high cost of titanium alloy parts is powder metallurgy for near net shape fabrication. For instance, it has been estimated that for every kilogram of titanium presently utilized in an aircraft, 8 kilograms of scrap are created. Powder metallurgy can substantially improve this ratio. Although this technology essentially involves the simple steps of powder production followed by compaction into a solid article, considerable development is currently underway to optimize the process such that the final product possesses at least equal properties and lower cost than wrought or cast material.
One potential powder metallurgy route to titanium alloy parts involves direct blending of elemental metal powders before compaction. Presently, titanium sponge fines from the Kroll process are used, but a major drawback is their high residual impurity content (principally chlorides), which results in porosity in the final material. The other powder metallurgy alternative involves direct use of titanium alloy powder subjected to hot isostatic pressing.
Several programs are currently involved in the optimization of such titanium alloy powders. Results are highly promising, but all involve Kroll titanium as a starting material. Use of such existing powders involves a number of expensive purification and alloying steps.
The present disclosure is the result of research to develop a new plasma process for direct and continuous production of high purity titanium powder and/or ingot. The previously-described steps (1) and (2) of the Kroll or Hunter processes are retained in this process, but steps (3), (4), and (5) are replaced by a single, high temperature process. This new process can directly produce high purity titanium from TiCl
Depending upon collection conditions encountered in the present process, the resulting titanium product can be either a powder suitable for the elemental blend approach to powder metallurgy or in an ingot or sponge-substitute. Titanium alloy powders and other materials can also be produced in a single step process by such direct plasma production systems.
The formation of titanium under plasma conditions has received intermittent attention in the literature over the last 30 years. Reports have generally been concerned with the hydrogen reduction of titanium tetrachloride or dioxide with some isolated references to sodium or magnesium reduction.
The use of hydrogen for reducing titanium tetrachloride has been studied in an arc furnace. Only partial reduction took place at 2100 K. The same reaction system has been more extensively studied in a plasma flame and patented for the production of titanium subchloride (German Patent 1,142,159, Jan. 10, 1963) and titanium metal (Japanese Patents 6854, May 23, 1963; 7408, Oct. 15, 1955; U.S. Pat. No. 3,123,464, Mar. 3, 1964).
Although early thermodynamic calculations indicated that the reduction of titanium tetrachloride to metallic titanium of hydrogen could start at 2500 K, the system is not a simple one. Calculations show that the formation of titanium subchloride would be thermodynamically more favorable in that temperature region.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,123,464, Mar. 3, 1964, claims that reduction of titanium tetrachloride to liquid titanium can be successfully carried out by heating the reactants (TiCl
Japanese Patent 7408, Oct. 15, 1955, described reaction conditions as follows: a mixture of TiCl
In neither of the above patents is the energy consumption clearly mentioned. Attempts to develop the hydrogen reduction process on an industrial scale were made using a skull-melting furnace, but the effort was discontinued. More recently, a claim was made that a small quantity of titanium had been produced in a hydrogen plasma, but this was later retracted when the product was truly identified as titanium carbide.
In summary, the history of attempts to treat TiCl
A second exemplary application of the present equipment and method pertains to production of acetylene from methane.
Natural gas (where methane is the main hydrocarbon) is a low value and underutilized energy resource in the U.S. Huge reserves of natural gas are known to exist in remote areas of the continental U.S., but this energy resource cannot be transported economically and safely from those regions. Conversion of natural gas to higher value hydrocarbons has been researched for decades with limited success in today's economy.
Recently, there have been efforts to evaluate technologies for the conversion of natural gas (which is being flared) to acetylene as a feed stock for commodity chemicals. The ready availability of large natural gas reserves associated with oil fields and cheap labor might make the natural gas to acetylene route for producing commodity chemicals particularly attractive in this part of the world.
Acetylene can be used as a feed stock for plastic manufacture or for conversion by demonstrated catalyzed reactions to liquid hydrocarbon fuels. The versatility of C
Thermal conversion of methane to liquid hydrocarbons involves indirect or direct processes. The conventional methanol-to-gasoline (MTG) and the Fischer-Tropsch (FT) processes are two prime examples of such indirect conversion processes which involve reforming methane to synthesis gas before converting to the final products. These costly endothermic processes are operated at high temperatures and high pressures.
The search for direct catalytic conversion of methane to light olefins (e.g. C
Light olefins can be formed by very high temperature (>1800° C.) abstraction of hydrogen from methane, followed by coupling of hydrocarbon radicals. High temperature conversion of methane to acetylene by the reaction 2CH
Methane to acetylene conversion processes currently use cold liquid hydrocarbon quenchants to prevent back reactions. Perhaps the best known of these is the Huels process which has been in commercial use in Germany for many years. The electric arc reactor of Huels transfers electrical energy by ‘direct’ contact between the high-temperature arc (15000-20000 K) and the methane feed stock. The product gas is quenched with water and liquefied propane to prevent back reactions. Single pass yields of acetylene are less than 40% for the Huels process. Overall C
Although in commercial use, the Huels process is only marginally economical because of the relatively low single pass efficiencies and the need to separate product gases from quench gases. Subsidies by the German Government have helped to keep this process in production.
Westinghouse has employed a hydrogen plasma reactor for the cracking of natural gas to produce acetylene. In the plasma reactor, hydrogen is fed into the arc zone and heated to a plasma state. The exiting stream of hot H
The Scientific and Industrial Research Foundation (SINTEF) of Norway has developed a reactor consisting of concentric, resistance-heated graphite tubes. Reaction cracking of the methane occurs in the narrow annular space between the tubes where the temperature is 1900 to 2100 K. In operation, carbon formation in the annulus led to significant operational problems. Again, liquefied quenchant is used to quench the reaction products and prevent back reactions. As with the previous two acetylene production processes described above, separation of the product gas from quench gas is needed. The overall multiple-pass acetylene yield from the resistance-heated reactor is about 80% and the process has been tested to pilot plant levels.
Like the Huels reactor, the present fast quench reactor can use an electric arc plasma process to crack the methane, but it requires no quenchant to prevent back reactions. In this manner it eliminates any need for extensive separation.
This invention relates to a reactor and method for producing desired end products by injecting reactants into the inlet end of a reactor chamber; rapidly heating the reactants to produce a hot reactant stream which flows toward the outlet end of the reactant chamber, the reactor chamber having a predetermined length sufficient to effect heating of the reactant stream to a selected equilibrium temperature at which the desired end product is available within the reactant stream as a thermodynamically stable reaction product at a location adjacent to the outlet end of the reaction chamber; passing the gaseous stream through a restrictive convergent-divergent nozzle arranged coaxially within the remaining end of the reactor chamber to rapidly cool the gaseous stream by converting thermal energy to kinetic energy as a result of adiabatic and isentropic expansion as it flows axially through the nozzle and minimizing back reactions, thereby retaining the desired end product within the flowing gaseous stream; and subsequently cooling and slowing the velocity of the desired end product and remaining gaseous stream exiting from the nozzle. Preferably the rapid heating step is accomplished by introducing a stream of plasma arc gas to a plasma torch at the inlet end of the reactor chamber to produce a plasma within the reactor chamber which extends toward its outlet end.
Preferred embodiments of the invention are described below with reference to the following drawings.
The fast quench reactor and method of operation described in this disclosure take advantage of the high temperatures (5,000° to 20,000° C.) available in a high temperature heating means such as a thermal plasma to produce materials that are thermodynamically stable at these high temperatures. These materials include metals, alloys, intermetallics, composites, gases and ceramics.
A converging-diverging (De Laval) nozzle located downstream from the plasma and reactant addition inlet(s) produces a rapid drop in kinetic temperature in a flowing gas stream. This effectively “freezes” or stops all chemical reactions. It permits efficient collection of desired end products as the gases are rapidly cooled without achieving an equilibrium condition. Resulting end products which have been produced in the plasma at high temperature but are thermodynamically unstable or unavailable at lower temperatures can then be collected due to resulting phase changes (gas to solid) or stabilization by cooling to a lower equilibrium state (gas to gas).
The fast quench reactor and method of this invention shall be described and illustrated forthwith in terms of a rapid heating means comprising a plasma torch and a stream of plasma arc gas. However, it will be recognized that the rapid heating means can also include other rapid heating means such as lasers, and flames produced by oxidation of a suitable fuel, e.g. an oxygen/hydrogen flame.
A schematic diagram of an ultra fast quenching apparatus is shown in FIG.
A plasma torch
A plasma is a high temperature luminous gas which is at least partially (1 to 100%) ionized. A plasma is made up of gas atoms, gas ions, and electrons. In the bulk phase a plasma is electrically neutral. A thermal plasma can be created by passing a gas through an electric arc. The electric arc will rapidly heat the gas by resistive and radiative heating to very high temperatures within microseconds of passing through the arc. The plasma is typically luminous at temperatures above 9000 K.
A plasma can be produced with any gas in this manner. This gives excellent control over chemical reactions in the plasma as the gas might be neutral (argon, helium, neon), reductive (hydrogen, methane, ammonia, carbon monoxide) or oxidative (oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide). Oxygen or oxygen/argon gas mixtures are used to produce metal oxide ceramics and composites. Other nitride, boride, and carbide ceramic materials require gases such as nitrogen ammonia, hydrogen, methane, or carbon monoxide to achieve the correct chemical environment for synthesis of these materials.
The details of plasma generating touches are well known and need not be further detailed within this disclosure to make the present invention understandable to those skilled in this field.
An incoming stream of plasma gas is denoted by arrow
Reactant materials are usually injected downstream of the location where the arc attaches to the annular anode of the plasma generator or torch. Materials which can be injected into the arc region include natural gas, such as is used in the Huels process for the production of ethylene and acetylene from natural gas.
Gases and liquids are the preferred forms of injected reactants. Solids may be injected, but usually vaporize too slowly for chemical reactions to occur in the rapidly flowing plasma gas before the gas cools. If solids are used as reactants, they will usually be heated to a gaseous or liquid state before injection into the plasma.
A convergent-divergent nozzle
As the confined stream of gas enters the diverging or downstream portions of the nozzle
An additional reactant, such as hydrogen at ambient temperatures, can be tangentially injected into the diverging section of nozzle
Numerals
Reaction particles are collectable within a cyclone separator shown generally at
Typical residence times for materials within the free flowing plasma are on the order of milliseconds. To maximize mixing with the plasma gas the reactants (liquid or gas) are injected under pressure (10 to 100 atmospheres) through a small orifice to achieve sufficient velocity to penetrate and mix with the plasma. It is preferable to use gaseous or vaporized reactants whenever practical, since this eliminates need for a phase change within the plasma and improves the kinetics of the reactor. In addition, the injected stream of reactants is injected normal (90° angle) to the flow of the plasma gases. In some cases positive or negative deviations from this 90° angle by as much as 30° may be optimum.
The high temperature of the plasma rapidly vaporizes the injected liquid materials and breaks apart gaseous molecular species to their atomic constituents. A variety of metals (titanium, vanadium, antimony, silicon, aluminum, uranium, tungsten), metal alloys (titanium/vanadium, titanium/aluminum, titanium/aluminum/vanadium), intermetallics (nickel aluminide, titanium aluminide), and ceramics (metal oxides, nitrides, borides, and carbides) can be synthesized by injecting metal halides (chlorides, bromides, iodides, and fluorides) in liquid or gaseous form into a plasma of the appropriate gas downstream from the anode arc attachment point and within the torch exit or along the length of the rector chamber. Titanium dioxide and antimony oxide are especially preferred ultrafine powders produced according to this invention. Solid metal halide materials are preferably vaporized and injected into the plasma as a liquid or gas to improve reaction kinetics.
The reaction chamber
Temperature requirements within the reactor chamber and its dimensional geometry are specific to the temperature required to achieve an equilibrium state with an enriched quantity of each desired end product.
There is a substantial difference in temperature gradients and gaseous flow patterns along the length of the reaction chamber
Since the reactions chamber is an area of intense heat and chemical activity it is necessary to construct the reactor chamber of materials that are compatible with the temperature and chemical activity to minimize chemical corrosion from the reactants, and to minimize melting degradation and ablation from the resulting intense plasma radiation. The reactor chamber is usually constructed of water cooled stainless steel, nickel, titanium, or other suitable materials. The rector chamber can also be constructed of ceramic materials to withstand the vigorous chemical and thermal environment.
The reaction chamber walls are internally heated by a combination of radiation, convection and conduction. Cooling of the reaction chamber walls prevents unwanted melting and/or corrosion at their surfaces. The system used to control such cooling should maintain the walls at as high a temperature as can be permitted by the selected wall material, which must be inert to the reactants within the reactor chamber at the expected wall temperatures. This is true also with regard to the nozzle walls, which are subjected to heat only by convection and conduction.
The dimensions of the reactor chamber are chosen to minimize recirculation of the plasma and reactant gases and to maintain sufficient heat (enthalpy) going into the nozzle throat to prevent degradation (undesirable back or side reaction chemistry).
The length of the reactor chamber must be determined experimentally by first using an elongated tube within which the user can locate the target reaction threshold temperature. The reactor chamber can then be designed long enough so that reactants have sufficient residence time at the high reaction temperature to reach an equilibrium state and complete the formation of the desired end products. Such reaction temperatures can range from a minimum of about 1700° C. to about 4000° C.
The inside diameter of the reactor chamber
The purpose of the converging section of the nozzle is to compress the hot gases rapidly into a restrictive nozzle throat with a minimum of heat loss to the walls while maintaining laminar flow and a minimum of turbulence. This requires a high aspect ratio change in diameter that maintains smooth transitions to a first steep angle (>45°) and then to lesser angles (>45°) leading into the nozzle throat.
The purpose of the nozzle throat is to compress the gases and achieve sonic velocities in the flowing hot gaseous stream. This converts the random energy content of the hot gases to translational energy (velocity) in the axial direction of gas flow. This effectively lowers the kinetic temperature of the gases and almost instantaneously limits further chemical reactions. The velocities achieved in the nozzle throat and in the downstream diverging section of the nozzle are controlled by the pressure differential between the reactor chamber and the section downstream of the diverging section of the nozzle. Negative pressure can be applied downstream or positive pressure applied upstream for this purpose.
The purpose of the diverging section of the nozzle is to smoothly accelerate and expand gases exiting the nozzle from sonic to supersonic velocities, which further lowers the kinetic temperature of the gases.
The term “smooth acceleration” in practice requires use of a small diverging angle of less than 35 degrees to expand the gases without suffering deleterious effects of separation from the converging wall and inducing turbulence. Separation of the expanding gases from the diverging wall causes recirculation of some portion of the gases between the wall and the gas jet exiting the nozzle throat. This recirculation in turn results in local reheating of the expanding gases and undesirable degradation reactions, producing lower yields of desired end products.
The super fast quench phenomena phenomenon observed in this reactor is achieved by rapidly converting thermal energy in the gases to kinetic energy via a modified adiabatic and isentropic expansion through a converging-diverging nozzle. In the process, the gas temperature and pressure drop extremely fast and the gas reaches supersonic velocity. It is important to first raise the temperature of the reactants in the rector chamber to a level at which the desired end product is more stable than other reaction products in equilibrium with it. This is normally a consequence of the fact that the free energy of the desired end product will decrease at the selected elevated temperatures in comparison to the remaining reaction products. However, this window of opportunity is very short-lived (>10
To understand the quench phenomenon in this reactor, it is necessary to investigate the changes in the temperature, pressure, and velocity of the gases as a function of changes in rector geometry.
The reactor nozzle
In the converging-diverging nozzle, the gas is flowing from a higher pressure P
The velocity of the gas in the throat of the nozzle, assuming adiabatic expansion, will achieve sonic values. When the gas accelerates through the nozzle throat, the temperature of the gas will, simultaneously drop rapidly. As a result of high velocity cooling, the initial gas temperature (T
P
After substituting T
This equation has been used to guide the design of the nozzle diameters used in the reactors built to date. Despite the assumption for constant γ (which is valid for an argon plasma), the equation has been quite accurate in predictions of mass flow as a function of temperature, pressure, molecular weight, and nozzle diameter compared to experimental results.
The velocity of the expanding gas in mach number (Ma) is related to temperature (T), pressure (P), density (Q=Ω
In the last equation above, A* is the cross-sectional area at the throat of the nozzle, and A is the cross-sectional area of the converging-diverging section. Substituting T
In a test case (using a 95% Ar and 5% H
The preferred method for producing titanium from titanium tetrachloride (TiCl a hydrogen into a hot plasma torch operated at 12 kW with a mixture of argon and hydrogen as the plasma gas (95% Argon; 5% Hydrogen, by volume) to decompose it to titanium and chlorine, followed by rapid expansion of the resulting hot gases and cooling with additional hydrogen to retain the titanium in an elemental solid metal state.
The diameter and length (6.0 mm×700.0 mm) of the reaction chamber was chosen to obtain maximum mixing while maintaining a minimum of 4000 K temperature at the entrance of the nozzle throat. The reaction chamber, converging/diverging nozzle were constructed from nickel 200 alloy to reduce corrosion. Standard equations were used to calculate the dimensions of the bell-shaped converging nozzle, nozzle throat diameter diverging angle, and diverging nozzle exit diameter.
Reactants: Titanium tetrachloride liquid and hydrogen gas
Plasma Torch: 10 kW laboratory plasma torch
30 Volts, 400 Amps
Cathode: thoriated tungsten in water cooled copper
Anode: Water=Cooled Copper Cylinder 6.0 mm diameterx 20.0 mm in length
Plasma Gas: 95% Argon, 5% Hydrogen. Average total gas flow was maintained at 23.6 liters/min.
Reactant Injection: Gaseous (200° C.) Titanium tetrachloride at the point where the plasma plume exits the plasma torch. The hot titanium tetrachloride injection tubes, reaction chamber and converging/diverging nozzle section were constructed from nickel 200 alloy to minimize corrosion.
Injection Rate: Vaporized Titanium tetrachloride was injected at the rate of 10.0 to 15.0 milliliters/hour. This resulted in a titanium metal powder production rate of 5 grams per hour.
Reaction Chamber: Water-cooled Nickel 200 cylinder 6.0 mm×20.0 mm
Converging Nozzle: Bell shaped with 2.0 mm radii
Nozzle throat: 2.0 mm×1.0 mm in length, determined from standard equations.
Diverging Nozzle: Conical shaped with 14° included angle expanding out to a 12.0 mm diameter.
Cool down section: Water-cooled stainless steel, 12.0 mm diameter×600.0 mm
Cyclone collectors: Water-cooled stainless steel, 12.0 mm inlet and outlet diameter, 50.0 mm inside diameter body, designed to maintain high entrance and exit velocity
Off-Gas Cleanup: After product collection the process gas was passed through a liquid nitrogen cold trap and HEPA filter to remove HCl gas and residual titanium particles before the gas enter the mechanical vacuum pump.
Vacuum System: A mechanical vacuum pump was used to maintain pressure downstream from the nozzle throat at 5.0 to 10.0 Tort (mm Hg)
The plasma torch
The plasma reduction is based on a quasi equilibrium-temperature quench sequence in which the initiation of nucleation is controlled by passage of a heated gaseous stream through a converging-diverging nozzle geometry. Results from present system tests have shown the feasibility of the process. The powder product is extremely fine (−20 nm).
Conditions necessary for complete dissociation of TiCl
Homogeneous (gas phase) nucleation of particles from the vapor in a plasma system has been studied theoretically and published discussion of such issues are readily available. The initiation of homogeneous nucleation depends on the formation of small atom clusters which arise due to collisions. Normally, the cluster evaporation rate is much greater than the condensation rate and the particle clusters do not grow. However at sufficiently low temperatures the vapor becomes supersaturated and the condensation rate drastically increases. This results in a nucleation burst after which time the particles increase in size slowly.
In a rapidly cooling plasma system one can think of the gas in equilibrium at temperature T
Taking into consideration the free energy equilibrium condition shown in
The saturation vapor pressures of Ti—Cl compounds at all temperatures are greater than that of Ti, and it is possible to selectively condense Ti metal. The presence of hydrogen serves to isolate the titanium from the chlorine atoms by forming both HCl and TiH In the gas phase.
Experimental conditions for selective condensation of Ti from a Ti—Cl—H—Ar plasma depend on specific values of rate coefficients and upon the initial temperature and pressure T
The converging-diverging nozzle configuration used in supersonic flow applications offers possibilities to control both the temperature quench rate and the concentration at which the plasma becomes “frozen” during the expansion. The converging-diverging DeLaval nozzle and the associated Prandtl-Meyer expansion process are discussed in standard texts on compressible fluid flow. In such expansion nozzles the hot plasma gas undergoes an approximate isentropic expansion and the energy in the gas (its enthalpy) is converted to unidirectional velocity in the diverging nozzle. When the exit pressure is sufficiently low. It is possible to reach supersonic speeds. Non-adiabatic expansion processes which are attained in practice aid in the resultant temperature search.
A number of preliminary experiments with TiCl
Nitrogen gas impurities in such systems result in the formation of solid NH
The powder produced is black. The as-produced product has been analyzed by SEM and characterized by Energy Dispersion Spectra (EDS). A SEM scan of the powder showed finer structure. A typical x-ray diffraction (XRD) scan is featureless (flat). It shows no crystal structure nor any short range ordering. An electron diffraction pattern confirms this result. The maximum yield of titanium metal to date with the present system is 5 gm/tr. It is 100% free of chlorine.
The addition of hydrogen to the plasma system ties up the chlorine atoms and produces TiH powder. The presence of hydrogen allows the powder to be relatively easily handled and may be crucial to scaled-up metal production facilities. When the powder is left in air for a few weeks, it turns noticeably white, indicating oxidation of the metal. In-situ laser induced fluorescence of TiO has been observed in the expansion chamber with a small amount (−100 ppm) of oxygen in the Ar carrier gas. This fluorescence can serve as a diagnostic to investigate temperatures in the expansion zone.
The described apparatus and method have been successfully tested with respect to production of powdered titanium metal. Product yields have exceeded 80% of theoretical yields. Analysis has confirmed that the produced powder is titanium metal and consisted of partly agglomerated submicron particles. Submicron powder production has been consistent from one run to the next. Laboratory experiments have successfully produced up to 5 grams of titanium per hour, which is to be compared to CVD deposition rates in the order of tenths of a gram of titanium per hour.
TiO
The resulting titanium dioxide has a rutile structure, which has superior properties in blocking ultraviolet light. Titanium dioxide particles can be produced with average diameters of 10 nanometers or less in the narrow size ranges as defined, which can find use as a sun blocking agent for protecting human skin against harmful effects of sunlight.
The process meets all requirements for titanium production, in that it provides downstream reduction in a kinetically controlled reactor to remove halide from back reactions, leaving free metal in the exiting gaseous stream Unwanted atomic reactions cannot occur in the reactor due to the short residence time of the gaseous stream.
Methane conversion to acetylene in a high temperature reactor follows the theoretical chemical reaction: 2CH
In practice, a range of other hydrocarbons, specifically the light olefins and solid carbon, are always formed as byproducts with acetylene if the reaction condition is not well controlled. Equilibrium thermodynamic calculations predict a yield of acetylene at 38%, but plasma conversion experiments indicate acetylene yields are as high as 70-85%. Solid carbon formation can be as low as 10%.
Experiments using the fast quench system of this disclosure have revealed that the methane decomposition to acetylene is kinetics controlled rather than equilibrium controlled. These results point to the advantage of high quench rates which provide opportunities to preserve high temperature equilibrium products.
where σ is surface tension, P
The homogeneous nucleation of carbon solid from the supersaturated hydrocarbon vapor species i occurs by the following sequence of events:
1. The gas-phase reaction proceeds until the supersaturation exceeds a certain critical value (>10
2. The nucleation occurs like a burst over a relatively short time period (10
3. The nucleation terminates due to the loss of nucleating species in the gas phase which are depleted by diffusion to the freshly formed particles.
From the equation above, it is clear that the degree of supersaturation from the chemical species controls the byproduct carbon nucleation from the gas phase reaction. Calculation of In SS will indicate the most probable carbon precipitation mechanism.
One prior published report fed methane into the flow of an argon plasma jet, and the experimental results showed about 80% acetylene was formed in the reaction. On the contrary, thermodynamic equilibrium calculations predicted a C
| TABLE 2 | |||
| Reaction | Temperature K. | Log K | |
| | |||
| C(g) = C(s) | 3200 | −0.18 | |
| 3000 | 0.17 | ||
| 2800 | 0.59 | ||
| ½C | 3400 | −1.77 | |
| 3200 | −1.61 | ||
| 3000 | 0.41 | ||
| ½C | 3200 | −1.58 | |
| 3000 | 1.39 | ||
| 2800 | 2.55 | ||
| ½C | 3000 | 0.86 | |
| 2500 | 1.17 | ||
| 2000 | 2.8 | ||
| ½C | 2000 | −5.48 | |
| 1500 | −8.28 | ||
From
As previously stated, the super fast quench phenomena observed in this reactor is achieved by rapidly converting thermal energy in the gases to kinetic energy via a modified adiabatic and isentropic expansion through a converging-diverging nozzle. In the process, the gas temperature and pressure drop extremely fast and the gas reaches supersonic velocity. Acetylene is more stable than other alkanes or alkenes at temperatures above 2000 K. This is a consequence of the fact that the free energy of acetylene decreases at elevated temperatures compared to other hydrocarbons. However, because this window of opportunity is very short-lived (<10
Assume that the final temperature drops almost by a factor of 4, which is easily attainable through the quench nozzle, if the final temperature in the quench chamber for the acetylene reaction is 500 K, then the initial temperature before the quench nozzle would be around 2000 K. This temperature would be associated with maximum acetylene conversion (FIG.
Locating the proper temperature zone for maximum C
In a proof of concept study, a Plasma Fast Quench Reactor was designed and built, utilizing expansive cooling to convert methane to acetylene. It was constructed basically as shown in
Hydrogen was used as a reactive plasma gas to heat methane to reaction temperatures and also served as a suppressant for solid carbon nucleation from the reaction. Downstream in the nozzle region, hydrogen could be used as an optional coolant of the diverging section of the nozzle if it is desirable. Initial experiments of methane conversion based on carbon balances yielded a product, in a single pass, consisting of 71% acetylene, 27% carbon black and 2% ethylene. The product gas also contained hydrogen as a by-product.
The best conversion observed in a series of experiments resulted in a product consisting of approximately 85% acetylene. 10% carbon black, and the balance other hydrocarbon gases. Besides carbonaceous products, hydrogen was also produced as a by product. These limited experiments clearly demonstrated the feasibility of the process and the potential superiority to any of the existing processes. In addition to the high conversion efficiency, the process has other significant features:
The process has a very high selectivity to acetylene production.
The system is very simple and compact, suggesting that capital costs for implementing it will be low.
The converging-diverging nozzle converted thermal energy to kinetic energy. Gas velocity downstream from the nozzle was believed to be supersonic; opportunities to use this kinetic energy to drive a turbine-generator are obvious.
By-product hydrogen could be used as feed stock for other processes or could be burned to drive a turbine generator to provide additional electrical power to the process.
The acetylene can be converted to other high value commodity chemicals by applying established chemical processes down stream of the reactor.
Table 3 is a condensation of information relating to application of this system to already proven end products. It lists reactants and plasma gas combinations that have successfully produced the identified products.
Since a number of modifications and changes in system configuration, operating set point and gas mixture were required to successfully demonstrate the hydrogen reduction of UF
In order to increase the degree of quenching (by increasing the Mach number at which the converging-diverging nozzle operated the system operating pressure was increased to approximately 40 psi.
Operation of the plasma source (torch) at this elevated pressure on a mixture of argon and hydrogen resulted in poor efficiency (<10% thermal efficiency) low plasma temperature, and energy content (enthalpy). The major source of this inefficiency was radiative heat transfer to the cooled anode. The energy input to the plasma (enthalpy) and resulting plasma temperature at this condition were insufficient to totally dissociate the UF
The final problem to be solved was optimization of the injector to insure “good” mixing of the UF
| TABLE 3 | |||||
| Injection | Injection | C-D Nozzle | |||
| Reactants | Plasma Gas | Method | Position | Shape (angle) | Products |
| TiCl | Argon/ | TiCl | 3.0-6.0 mm | C-45° to bell | Titanium |
| Hydrogen | 180-200° C. | from Torch | shaped | Metal + | |
| exit | D-26-6° | HCL gas | |||
| VCl | Argon/ | VCl | 3.0-6.0 mm | C-45° to bell | Vanadium |
| Hydrogen | 180-200° C. | from Torch | shaped | Metal + | |
| exit | D-25-6° | HCl gas | |||
| AlCl | Argon/ | AlCl | 3.0-6.0 mm | C-45° to bell | Aluminum |
| Hydrogen | 120-150° C. | from Torch | shaped | Metal + | |
| exit | D-25-6° | HCL gas | |||
| TiCl | Agron/ | TiCl | 3.0-6.0 mm | C-45° to bell | TiV Alloy |
| VCl | Hydrogen | H | from Torch | shaped | powder + |
| VCl | 180-200° C. | exit | D-25-6° | HCl gas | |
| TiCl | Argon/ | TiCl | 3.0-6.0 mm | C-45° to bell | TiB |
| BCl | Hydrogen | 50 psi + | from Torch | shaped | composite |
| H | BCl | exit | D-25-6° | Ultrafine | |
| 50 psi + | powder | ||||
| H | ceramic | ||||
| TiCl | Argon/ | TiCl | TiCl | C-Bell Shaped | Ultrafine |
| Oxygen or | 50 psi | 1-3 mm from | D-10 to 25° | TiO | |
| Oxygen | O | torch | included | powder | |
| 50 psi | exit | ||||
| WF | Agron/ | WF | WF | C-Conical | Ultrafine |
| Hydrogen/or | 50 psi, | torch exit | D-Conical 10- | Tungsten | |
| Hydrogen | 80-120° C. | 20° included | Metal | ||
| powder | |||||
| UF | Argon | UF | UF | C-Conical | Ultrafine |
| Argon | Hydrogen/ | 40-75 psi, | torch exit | D-Conical | Uranium |
| Helium | 20-100° C. | 20° included | metal | ||
| powder | |||||
| H | Argon/ | CH | interior of | C-Bell Shaped | 80% + |
| Hydrogen or | 50-100 psi | torch or 1-3 | D-10 to 25° | Acetylene | |
| Hydrogen | mm from | included | Lesser | ||
| amounts of | |||||
| ethylene & | |||||
| carbon(s) | |||||
| Argon + | Argon | CH | Interior of | C-Bell shaped | Ultrafine |
| CH | 56-100 psi | torch or | D-10 to | carbon black | |
| 1-3 mm from | 25° included | powder | |||
| torch exit | |||||
One very important commercial product listed in Table 3 is the ultrafine titanium dioxide ceramic powder obtained by oxidizing titanium tetrachloride in an oxygen enriched plasma gas. This system has been successfully used to produce an ultrafine particle size range of less than 500 nanometers, with 10-100 nanometers being the preferred range. The particles have been successfully produced within a narrow size range, meaning that 90 percent of the particles would fall within a 25 nanometer size range.
An initial experiment to produce titanium metal powder was successfully conducted using the plasma fast quench process early in the development of this system. A nontransferred plasma torch was operated at 3 kW input power. Argon was bubbled through liquid titanium tetrachloride and the argon with entrained titanium tetrachloride vapor was injected into the argon plasma jet at the torch exit. Hydrogen reductant was injected normal to the plasma at a position 180° and directly across from titanium tetrachloride injection.
The reaction chamber, converging/diverging nozzle and downstream cooling section were constructed of copper coated with an alumina type ceramic. The purpose of the ceramic was to prevent corrosion of the cooper by HCl produced in this process and reduce heat loss from the reaction zone.
The reactor chamber for this original system test was 2.0 cm in diameter by 10.0 cm in length. The quench section consisted of a 90° included angle converging section followed by a 3.0 mm diameter throat and a 90° included angle diverging section issuing into a 4.0 cm diameter by 20 cm long cool down section. Four tangential hydrogen gas jets (1.0 mm diam) were placed in the diverging section of the nozzle approximately 5 mm downstream from the nozzle throat. Injection of cold hydrogen gas at this point seemed to improved yields of titanium. It was later learned that even better quenching could be accomplished by reducing the expansion angle of the diverging section of the nozzle to less than a 20° included angle, with the optimum diverging included angle being 6° to 14°.
As a further example of dimensional design for a laboratory-scale reactor, subsequent tests were conducted using a reactor chamber length of 20 mm, although tests have been conducted with reactor chamber lengths ranging to 150 mm lengths. The plasma inlet opening was 6 mm and the reactor chamber interior diameter was 11 mm. The downstream cool down section after the nozzle was typically 1 to 1:3 m, although lengths ranging from 0.3 to 4 m have been tested. The cool down section can be constructed as long as required to reach a desired final temperature in the exiting gaseous stream and products contained within it.
The system used for proof of concept experiments was based on relatively crude approximations of anticipated velocity, pressure, and temperature profiles. While formation of carbon black is of concern because it reduces yield, this can be minimized by experimentally determining the optimum location of quenching. Similarly, the choice of materials of construction for this equipment can be important, as certain materials catalyze undesirable reactions or conversely can catalyze the desirable reactions.
Titanium metal powder production in the early laboratory device was on the order of 0.1 to 0.5 grams per hour. This yield was improved to 0.5 to 1.0 gram per hour by (1) optimizing the geometry of the reactor: (2) addition of 1 to 5% hydrogen to the argon plasma gas to increase heat to the process while also preheating the hydrogen reductant for reaction with titanium tetrachloride; (3) injecting liquid or vaporized titanium tetrachloride into the reaction zone with a minimum of carrier gas; and (4) use of hydrogen as the carrier gas.
The quench reaction zone geometry was optimized by conducting two dimensional modeling of the fluid dynamics of such a system. Modeling results determined that reaction zone diameter should be no larger than 200% of the plasma torch anode exit diameter with the optimum being 110% to 150%. This prevents recirculation of reaction gases in the reaction zone which would contribute to undesirable side reactions and decrease product yields.
Gas temperatures were measured experimentally along an elongated reaction section and were also modeled using a two dimensional fluid dynamics model to determine the optimum length of the reaction zone before the converging section. A reaction zone length was chosen from this data for a given plasma input power level, plasma gas flow, and reactant input rate which would result in gas temperatures at the entrance to the nozzle throat to be greater than the required equilibrium temperature of the desired end product—4000 K (for production of titanium).
A high aspect ratio converging section was designed such that the radius of the convex and concave surfaces leading into the nozzle throat were approximately equal to the diameter of the nozzle throat. This converging geometry allows achieving the highest possible velocity at the entrance to the nozzle throat while limiting heat loss to the walls of the converging section or separation of the gas flow from the converging surface.
The optimum area (diameter) of the nozzle throat was calculated from equations available in texts pertaining to nozzle design. The nozzle throat was designed so that with the temperature, gas composition, mass flow, and pressure of the gas entering the nozzle known (or estimated) sonic or near sonic gas velocities are achieved in the nozzle throat. To achieve maximum cooling (temperature drop) the nozzle throat should be as short as possible. This is demonstrated by two equations for two-dimensional nozzle flow, with R* and h* designating the radius of curvature and throat height respectively:
where T
The divergence angle and area at the exit of the diverging nozzle were determined from standard texts on fluid dynamics and aerospace rocket motor design. In addition, two dimensional models of fluid flow under expected experimental conditions were also used to optimize the divergence angle and exit area of the nozzle. It was concluded that the optimum divergence included angle was less than 35° and preferably in the range of 10° to 14° for optimum expansion and acceleration of the gas. The maximum exit area (diameter) of the diverging nozzle was again determined by calculation from equations available in standard texts on fluid flow and rocket engine design.
The maximum allowable nozzle exit area depends on the mass flow through the nozzle and pressure difference between the reaction zone and the downstream cooling section. Choice of too large an expansion angle or too large an exit area will result in the gas flow “peeling off” or separating from the wall, which results in the undesirable conditions of turbulence, gas recirculation, gas reheating. and side or back reaction degradation of the desired end products.
The purpose of the cool down section of the plasma fast quench reactor device is to reduce the gas velocity while removing heat energy (which results from the decrease in velocity) in the gas at a rate sufficient to prevent the gas from increasing in kinetic temperature. Passage of the gaseous stream through the restrictive nozzle opening reduces its kinetic temperature, but remove no energy from the gas. The exiting gaseous stream is slowly warmed as some random motion of the gaseous contents is restored. This heat must be immediately removed from the system as it is produce produced , thereby maintaining the kinetic temperature of the resulting gaseous stream at a desired equilibrium level and preventing back reactions downstream from the nozzle.
In the case of experimental work to date this “cool down” has been accomplished by the use of length of water cooled tube having the same internal diameter as the internal exit diameter of the diverging section of the nozzle. With other applications of this device, it may be more desirable to supplement gas cooling by use of other types of heat exchangers.
Plasma quench processes for production of ultrafine materials require product collection capability downstream of the quench nozzle, preferably downstream of the cool down section. Bench scale experiments to date have used cyclonic collectors of standard dimensions described in the literature for gas and mass flows several time smaller than called for in the literature. This accommodates sonic or near sonic gas velocities through the cyclones, which allows efficient removal of ultrafine material (10 to 50 nm diameter powders).
In addition to mass flow and nozzle diameter, the third process parameter that determines the temperature drop across the nozzle is the ratio of the up stream pressure (P P P
For large scale production of ultrafine powders, it is expected that the quench system would be designed to operate with elevated pressures in the plasma torch and reaction chamber of 5 to 10 atmospheres pressure. This would accomplish the desired pressure drop across the nozzle while reducing a possibly eliminating the need for a vacuum device to lower the pressure on the downstream side of the nozzle.
Using design considerations given in the section above and equations outlined in published texts relating to nozzles, a bench sale reactor was constructed for synthesis of titanium, vanadium, aluminum, and TiN Alloys. This equipment was designed for operation at 12 KW input power to the plasma torch, using a plasma gas flow of 50 scfh and a plasma gas made up of 95% argon and 5% hydrogen gas. The equipment used to produce these materials consisted of a small bench scale plasma torch operated at 12 kW electrical input power attached to a reactor section, quench nozzle, cyclone powder collector, liquid nitrogen cold trap to collect by-product HCL and mechanical vacuum pump.
To produce titanium metal particles, titanium tetrachloride was heated above its boiling point and injected into the reaction chamber at the junction between the plasma torch and the reaction section. The reaction section, quench nozzle, and expansion chamber were constructed of water cooled nickel. The reaction section was 11.0 mm inside diameter and 150.0 mm in length. The quench nozzle section consisted of a high aspect ratio converging section followed by a 6.2 mm nozzle, and 12° included angle expansion section followed a 20.0 mm I.D., 50.0 cm cool down section. The cooled mixture of titanium powder and gas was passed through two sonic cyclone particle separators to collect the ultrafine powder. Hydrogen chloride vapor was condensed out in a liquid nitrogen cooled cold trap to prevent damage to the mechanical vacuum pump down stream from the particle collection. Titanium was produced according to equation (1) below:
Ultrafine vanadium metal powder was produced using the bench scale apparatus described above. Vanadium tetrachloride liquid (B.P 145° C.) was heated to vapor and injected in the same manner as titanium tetrachloride described above with hydrogen carrier gas. Ultrafine vanadium metal powder was produced at the rate of a 0.5 gram per hour according to one of the following equations:
An ultrafine powder consisting of an alloy of titanium and vanadium was produced by two methods. Method
Ultrafine aluminum metal powder was produced by vaporizing (subliming) solid aluminum trichloride in a specially designed oven and carried into the plasma quench reactor in a stream of hydrogen gas in the manner described for titanium above. Special care was needed to insure all sections of the injection system were maintained above 200° C., to prevent formation of solid aluminum trichloride. The process utilized the following equation:
In compliance with the statute, the invention has been described in language more or less specific as to the experimental mental equipment and methodical features. It is to be understood, however, that the invention is not limited to the specific features described, since the means herein disclosed comprise preferred forms of putting the invention into effect. The invention is, therefore, claimed in any of its forms or modifications within the proper scope of the appended claims appropriately interpreted in accordance with the doctrine of equivalents.