Title of Invention

A METHOD OF PRODUCING CARBON BLACK PARTICLES

Abstract ABSTRACT 1168/MAS/96 The present invention relates to a method of producing carbon black particles such as carbon black with increased order in the nanostructure wherein the carbon particles are fed into a plasma zone by means of a carrier gas, the carbon are after-treated with heat treatment in a plasma zone (9) and wherein the gross enthalpy from 1 to 10 kWh/kg is induced in the carbon particles, characterized in that a residence time is employed in the range of 0.07 sec. to 0.01 sec. and the ratio of residence time to enthalpy in the plasma zone (9) is adjusted in such a manner that the carbon particles are heated to a temperature which provides increased order in the nanostructure and which does not exceed 3700°C, thus preventing sublimation of the carbon particles.
Full Text

Heat treatment of carbon materials
The invention concerns a method for heat treatment of carbon materials and especially carbon black in a plasma process for increased order in the nano-structure, i.e. an increased degree of graphitization, in the carbon black particles. The process consists in an upgrading of commercial carbon qualities. The heat treatment is performed in a plasma zone where residence time and the power supplied are controlled to ensure that the carbon material does not sublimate, thereby preventing the carbon from evaporating and being transformed into a new product.
The microstructure in carbon black particles is composed of small crystallite areas in a turbostratic order, i.e. parallel layers rotated but not ordered around the c-axis. The graphitic layers are concentrically ordered towards the particle surface, i.e. parallel orientation, with an increasing degree of disorder in towards the centre of the particles.
The crystallite dimension is defined by Lc, La and d 002 respectively. Lc is the crystallite size in the c-direction, i.e. height, and is the average stacking height of graphitic layers. La is the size or spread of the layers and represents the average diameter of each layer, d 002 is the distance between the graphitic layers.
Crystallite dimensions measured by X-ray diffraction for carbon black produced by known conventional processes are specified in Table 1.
Structural properties of carbon black determined by X-ray diffraction (nm)


It is known that heat treatment alters the degree of order in the nanostructure in the carbon black particles. The crystallite size increases through increased average diameter (La) of the graphitic layers and through increased average layer height (Lc). The distance between the graphitic layers (d 002) is reduced.
Heat treatment of carbon black conducted at temperatures just over 1000oC has an effect on nanostructure and morphology. Raising the temperature to 2700oC or higher has a powerful effect on the order of graphitic layers and the growth of crystallites reaches a level corresponding to the data for Acetylene Black.
Heat treatment methods are known which consist in heating in an induction furnace in an inert gas atmosphere to a temperature between 1100°C and 2400oC with a residence time from a few minutes to several hours.
■In US 4 351 815 there is disclosed a method for heat treatment of carbon black in a furnace with two heat zones. In the first zone it is heated to a temperature between 565°C and 760oC in order to convert any oxygen present to carbon dioxides and in the second zone it is heated to a temperature between 1400oC and 2400°C. The heat treatment time can vary from 9 sec. to 10 minutes.
In DD 292 920 there is disclosed a method for producing superior carbon black from inferior carbon black in a plasma reactor. Enthalpy of at least 3 kWh/kg is induced into the raw material at a reaction time between 0.1 and I sec, thus causing the carbon to be completely or partially sublimated. It is present in the form of gaseous carbon, and the process therefore has to be characterized as a transformation of the raw material and not a heat treatment process.
In WO 94/17908 there is disclosed a method for transforming carbon materials such as carbon black and graphite with an unsatisfactory nanostructure in a plasma reactor. An energy of between 40 kW/h and 150 kW/h is supplied to the raw material with a residence time in the reaction chamber of between 2 and 10 sec. The process has to be characterized as a transformation of the raw material and not a heat treatment process.

The object of the present invention is to provide an improved method for heat treatment of carbon materials and especially all types of carbon black in order to obtain an increased order in the nanostructure. This order in the nanostructure can be determined by standard test methods such as microscoping and by X-ray diffraction.
A further object of the invention is upgrading of commercial carbon black qualities, and another object is upgrading of carbon materials of a non-graphitized type, e.g., are used as electrode materials.
Yet a further object is to be able to use the invention in order to attain special qualities which have not been produced hitherto or which can be difficult to produce by known production processes without the use of expensive raw materials such as acetylene.
A further object of the invention is to provide a method which can treat large amounts of raw materials in a short time thus making the process economically viable.
Accordingly the present invention provides A method of producing carbon black particles such as carbon black with increased order in the nanostructure wherein the carbon particles are fed into a plasma zone by means of a carrier gas, the carbon are after-treated with a treatment in a plasma zone and wherein the gross enthalpy from 1 to 10 kWh/kg is induced in the carbon particles, characterized in that a residence time i employed in

the range of 0.07 sec. to 0.01 sec. and the ratio of residence time to enthalpy in the plasma zone is adjusted in such a maimer that the carbon particles are heated to a temperature which provides increased order in the nanostructure and which does not exceed 3700°C, thus preventing sublimation of the carbon particles.
In the known conventional methods for heat treatment the residence time for the raw material in the furnace is from 10 sec. to several hours. Such processes cannot treat large volumes in a short time and are therefore not a profitable undertaking. The surprising discovery has been made that the heat treatment time for carbon particles such as carbon black can be drastically reduced. By means of heat treatment in a plasma process, i.e. in a plasma zone, the same order of the graphitic layers is achieved as during heating in a furnace.
In a plasma Zone, however, an increased order in the nanostructure is already achieved after a residence time in the range of 0-5 to 0.1 sec. or shorter. It has been shown that even a residence time of 0.05 sec. or shorter is sufficient to achieve a satisfactory order in the nanostructure. Thus a profitable method is provided, since a large volume can be treated in a short time.

This kind of heat treatment can be performed in a plasma zone which is created in a plasma torch where an electric arc bums between electrodes, or in a plasma zone which is created by induction heating, e.g. high frequency heating of a gas.
Various carbon materials such as coal, coke, etc. can be heat treated, but first and foremost specific carbon black qualities in order to obtain a special quality. The carbon particles are fed into the plasma zone by means of a carrier gas. This carrier gas may also be the plasma gas.
An inert gas such as Ar or N2 can be used as the carrier or plasma gas. A reducing gas such as H2, or a process gas which can be a mixture of H2 + CH4 + CO + C02 can also be used, A combination of these gases may also be employed.
The invention will now be explained in more detail by means of an embodiment which is illustrated i^ a purely schematic form in fig. 1 which illustrates the principle of the design of a plasma torch with supply of a raw material to the plasma zone. The drawing illustrates the basic concept of a plasma torch, thus enabling a person skilled in the art to develop the technical solutions by the use of well-known means.
The plasma torch can be of conventional design. One design is described in Norwegian patent no. 174450 - PCT/NO92/00195 - WO 93/12633 from the same applicant. This plasma torch is intended for energy supply to chemical processes.
The plasma torch illustrated in figure 1 is designed with an external electrode 1 and a central electrode 2. The electrodes are tubular in shape and are placed coaxially inside each other. The electrodes are solid and made of a material with a high melting point with good electrical conductivity such as graphite. Cooled metal electrodes may also be used. The electrodes can be supplied with either direct current or alternating current. Around the electrodes in the area of operation of the electric arc there is placed a coil 3 which is supplied with direct current, thus forming an axial magnetic field.
The plasma gas can be supplied through the annular space 4 between the electrodes. The plasma gas can also be the carrier gas for the carbon particles.

The carbon particles are thereby passed through the electric arc, thus ensuring that they receive uniform exposure in the plasma zone 9. The residence time for the carbon black particles in the plasma zone 9 can be set on the. basis of the rate of gas flow for the plasma gas.
The carrier gas containing the carbon particles may be supplied through a boring 5 in the central electrode 2 or through a separate supply pipe 6 which is located coaxially in the central electrode 2. A design of a supply pipe is described in Norwegian patent no. 174 180 = PCT/NO92/00I98 -WO 93/12634 from the same applicant. This supply pipe is movable in the axial direction for positioning of the outlet in relation to the plasma zone 9. The residence time for the carbon black particles in the plasma zone 9 can thereby be set on the basis of the rate of gas flow for the carrier gas and by means of the position of the supply pipe in relation to the plasma electric arc.
As a third alternative the carrier gas containing the carbon particles may be supplied through one or more"supply pipes 7 at and under the electric arc zone 9. Several supply pipes can be located along the circumference of the reactor chamber 8 at different levels at increasing distances from the plasma torch's electrodes 1,2. The residence time for the carbon black particles in the plasma zone 9 can thereby be set depending on which supply pipes are used.
High temperature plasma is formed by means of the gas which is heated by the electric arc which bums between the electrodes. In a plasma zone of this kind extremely high temperatures are reached, from 3000oC to 20 000oC, and it is in this zone that the heat treatment is performed.
The plasma torch is provided in connection with a reactor chamber 8 where the heat-treated material can be cooled, e.g. by the supply of cold plasma gas/carrier gas, which is thereby heated and can be recycled and used for energy supply. In addition to or as a part of the cooling gas special substances can be added in order to obtain certain chemical functional groups on the surface of the carbon particles. Such substances can be supplied in an area where the temperature has dropped to a specific level. Such substances may also be supplied in a succeeding chamber.
The rest of the equipment is of a known conventional type which includes cooler, as well as separating equipment which may consist of a cyclone or

filter device where the carbon is separated. A design of such an arrangement is described in Norwegian patent no. 176 968 - PCT/NO93/00057 -WO 93/20(53 from the same applicant.
The process is highly intensive and free of impurities. The process can be conducted as a continuous process or it can be employed intermittently. The process can be used in connection with an existing process, e.g. an oil furnace process or a plasma process. It can also be used integrated in a plasma process for the production of carbon black developed by the same applicant and described in Norwegian patent no. 175 718 -PCT/NO92/00196 - WO 93/12030 . In this process hydrocarbons are decomposed by means of the energy from a plasma torch into a carbon part and hydrogen which is fed into subsequent stages in a reactor chamber with temperature zones for regulation and control of the quality of the products obtained. In the reactor one or more additional plasma torches can be installed where a heat treatment process according to the invention can be performed on the created carbon Black.
An gross enthalpy from 1 to 10 kWh/kg, preferably from 2 to 6 kWh/kg, is induced in the carbon black particles which have residence time in the plasma zone in the range of 0.5 to 0.01 sec, preferably less than 0.1 sec. and especially less than 0.07 sec. This gives the carbon black particles a temperature up to but not over the sublimation temperature for carbon which is 3700oC.
The gross enthalpy which is induced gives an increase in the system's total energy. Both heating of carbon black, plasma gas and carrier gas as well as heat loss are included in the gross balance. In order to prevent carbon black from evaporating/sublimating, it must not be heated to temperatures over 3700°C.


Enthalpy data tor carbon state that AH can be around a maximum of
2 kWh/kg in order to keep the temperature below 3700oC. The reason why
the supply of more energy does not cause evaporation is that heat treatment
provides a more ordered structure which in turn means that the entropy of the
particles declines. Thus it will be possible for AH in the equation above to be
below 2 kWh/kg even though the supplied energy (AG) is greater than 2
kWh/kg.
The residence time should be understood as the time elapsed when the carbon black particles are exposed in the initial transfer stage for energy absorption in or at the plasma zone or the electric arc zone. The carbon particles have a high degree of emissivity, e>0.9, and in the course of a very short time which can be measured in milliseconds, they reach a temperature of over 3000°C due to heat radiation from the electric arc and possibly also from the electrodes. In the course of a very short time the carbon particles transfer some of their absorbed energy to the plasma gas and/or carrier gas by means of heat radiation and heat 6onduction. The plasma gas and the carrier gas have low emissivity, e Figure 2 shows a diagram for the temperature reached by the carbon particles and the plasma gas/carrier gas in a plasma zone as a function of time. The solid line shows the temperature as a function of time for the carbon particles and the dotted line shows the temperature as a function of time for the plasma/carrier gas at a given gross enthalpy in the range of 5 kWh/kg carbon black.
Table 2 shows values for La, Lc and d 002 together with residence time and enthalpy for various qualities of carbon black before and after heat treatment with the above-mentioned parameters in a plasma zone and with the use of different types of plasma gas.



During the heat treatment chemical functional groups and impurities which are attached or bound to the surface of the carbon particles will be reduced or removed. The heat treatment leads to a dramatic reduction in the surface activity related to liberation of chemically bound hydrogen, from a level of 2500 ppm to approximately 100 ppm or lower.
In order to achieve special chemical functional groups on the surface of the carbon particles, special substances can be added to the plasma gas and/or carrier gas. These can be oxidizing media such as C02, CO, 02, air and H20 or reducing media such as H2, halogens, acids, etc.
Carbon black heat treated according to the method in the invention can be
compared to carbon black heat treated for several hours in an induction
furnace. Table 3 shows values for La, Lc and d 002 for one type of carbon
black before and after heat treatment in an induction furnace and the same
carbon black after heat treatment in the plasma process according to the
invention. *■


V Process data for heat treatment in a plasma zone:
Plasma generator and reactor chamber as described.
Feed material: Carbon black 10 kg/h
Carrier gas: Ar 3 Nm3/h
Plasma gas: Process gas: 3 Nm3/h
Reactor pressure: 2 bar
Enthalpy induced: 2.9 - 4.8 kWh/kg
Residence time: 0.09 sec.
The process gas consists of: 50% H2, 1.5% CH4, 48% CO and 1.5% C02.
The temperature reached by the carbon particles in the plasma zone is lower than 3700°C and the resulting temperature for carbon black and gases is approximately 2000°C.
Table 4 shows values for La, Lc and d 002 for a quality carbon black before and after heat treatment in a plasma zone according to the invention where two different plasma gases are employed.

The effect of the heat treatment will be to provide improved properties in the materials where carbon black is used as an additive. Reference is made in the

following section to various products where special qualities of carbon black obtained by heat treatment according to the invention are employed.
Dry cell batteries:
[n conventional dry cell batteries acetylene black or alternatively "special conductive black" qualities are employed. The latter are produced by the traditional "oil furnace process" followed by a known oxidizing or heat treatment stage. The use of special qualities gives an increase in the electrolyte capacity, better discharge characteristics etc., with the result that these qualities exhibit properties which are close to but not on the same level as acetylene black.
By means of the heat treatment according to the invention of traditionally produced carbon black qualities in a plasma zone a further degree of order is obtained in the nanostructure, thus enabling values to be achieved which are equal to or higher than those which are measured for acetylene black.
Electrically conductive carbon black:
A series of carbon black qualities such as "conductive", "super conductive" md "extra conductive" have been developed for specific applications. These provide electrically conductive and antistatic properties to polymer mixtures even when added in small amounts. These carbon black qualities give aptimum conductivity as they possess high structure, high porosity, small particle size and a chemically pure surface. For these qualities a heat preatment according to the invention provides an even better degree of conductivity.
Traditional carbon black qualities which are employed, e.g., as additives in tubber can be upgraded in the same way to "conductive black". A heat reatment in a plasma zone according to the invention will clean the surface of oxides and impurities and optimize the internal conductivity in the carbon black particles by providing a greater degree of graphitization.
Non-graphitic carbon materials such as anthracite, petrol coke, tar coke and others can be treated according to the method according to the invention. Such carbon materials are, e.g., frequently used as electrodes and in fireproof

production after a graphitization process involving heat treatment in a calcination furnace. A heat treatment according to the invention offers an alternative to the traditional calcination process and will bring the average distance between the graphitic layers, d 002, from a value of 0.344 nm down to a level of 0.335 nm as in graphite.
In fuel cell technology heat treatment of the electrode material will be an appropriate process. In phosphoric acid (PAFC) and solid polymer fuel cells (SPFC) graphite is used with a platinum catalyst as anode and cathode. In this context it is important that the electrodes have good electrical conductivity. By means of heat treatment of carbon materials according to the invention the increased degree of graphitization achieved through increased order in the nanostructure will entail an increase in the electrical conductivity of the material.
Thermally conductive carbon black:
Good thermal conductivity is desirable in polymer mixtures in order to avoid heat build-up and overheating and carbon black'with good thermally conductive properties plays a substantial role m achieving this. It is known that the basic property of carbon black which contributes to this effect is a high degree of order, i.e. graphitization, with acetylene black as the best in this respect.
Heat treatment in a plasma zone according to the invention will provide this effect to all known traditional carbon black qualities.


WE CLAIM:
1. A method of producing carbon black particles such as carbon black with increased order in the nanostructure wherein the carbon particles are fed into a plasma zone by means of a carrier gas, the carbon are after-treated with heat treatment in a plasma zone (9) and wherein the gross enthalpy from 1 to 10 kWh/kg is induced in the carbon particles, characterized in that a residence time is employed in the range of 0.07 sec. to 0.01 sec. and the ratio of residence time to enthalpy in the plasma zone (9) is adjusted in such a manner that the carbon particles are heated to a temperature which provides increased order in the nanostructure and which does not exceed 3700oC thus preventing sublimation of the carbon particles.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein an enthalpy from 2 to 6 kWh/kg is induced in the carbon material.
3. The method as claimed in claims 1 & 2, wherein the residence time for the carbon particles in the plasma zone (9) is adjusted by controlling the rate of gas flow for plasma and/or carrier gas or by controlling the rate of gas flow for carrier gas and by the position of the supply pipe (6) in relation to the plasma zone or by the choice of supply pipes (7) which are used for introduction of the carbon particles and carrier gas.

4. The method as claimed in claims 1 to 3, wherein in order to
obtain chemical functional groups on the surface of the carbon material, an
oxidizing medium such as CO2 CO, H2O, air or O2 or a reducing medium
such as H2 or halogens or acids are used as plasma and carrier gas or are
added to plasma and carrier gas.
5. The method as claimed in claim 1 to 4, wherein the after
treatment is conducted in connection with a production process.
6. A method of producing carbon black particles substantially as
herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings.


Documents:

1168-mas-1996 abstract duplicate.pdf

1168-mas-1996 abstract.pdf

1168-mas-1996 assignment.pdf

1168-mas-1996 claims duplicate.pdf

1168-mas-1996 claims.pdf

1168-mas-1996 correspondence others.pdf

1168-mas-1996 correspondence po.pdf

1168-mas-1996 description (complete) duplicate.pdf

1168-mas-1996 description (complete).pdf

1168-mas-1996 drawings.pdf

1168-mas-1996 form-10.pdf

1168-mas-1996 form-2.pdf

1168-mas-1996 form-26.pdf

1168-mas-1996 form-29.pdf

1168-mas-1996 form-4.pdf

1168-mas-1996 form-6.pdf

1168-mas-1996 others.pdf

1168-mas-1996 pct search report.pdf

1168-mas-1996 petition.pdf


Patent Number 196264
Indian Patent Application Number 1168/MAS/1996
PG Journal Number 08/2007
Publication Date 23-Feb-2007
Grant Date 04-Jan-2006
Date of Filing 03-Jul-1996
Name of Patentee KVAERNER TECHNOLOGY & RESEARCH LTD
Applicant Address ST. JAMES HOUSE, 23 KING STREET, LONDON SW1Y 60Y
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 STEINAR LYNUM HARTMANNSVEI 40B, 0284 OSLO
2 JAN HUGDAHL HARALD BOTHNERS VEI 10, N-7017 TRONDHEIM
3 KETIL HOX GJORTLERVEIN 10, N-7021 TRONDHEIM
4 RICHARD SMET F. VANDENBERGHELAAN 92, B-2630 AARTSELAAR
5 NICOLAS PROBST AV. DES FRERES BECQUE 77, B-1050 BRUSSELS
PCT International Classification Number C09C1/44
PCT International Application Number N/A
PCT International Filing date
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 952725 1995-07-07 Norway