Title of Invention

"METHOD FOR PURIFYING (METH) ACRYLIC ACID OBTAINED BY OXIDISING A GASEOUS SUBSTRATE."

Abstract A method for purifying (meth) acrylic acid obtained by catalytic or redox oxidation, of a gas substrate consisting of propane and/or propylene and/or acrolein in the case of the manufacture of acrylic acid, and of isobutane and/or isobutene and/or tertbutyl alcohol and/or methacrolein in the case of the manufacture of methacrylic acid, said gas mixture (1) mainly consisting of: - propane and/or propylene or isobutane and/or isobutene if previously contained by the substrate, of the kind such as herein described; - final oxidation products; - the desired (meth)acrylic acid; - (meth)acrolein; - tertbutyl alcohol in the case of the manufacture of methacrylic acid; - water vapor; - acetic acid with, in the case of the manufacture of methacrylic acid, acrylic acid as a byproduct; and - heavy products of side reactions, - according to which the reaction gas mixture (1) is sent to the bottom of an absorption column (C1) which is supplied at the top and in countercurrent with at least one heavy hydrophobic absorption solvent of the kind such as herein described, to obtain: - at the top of the column (C1) a gas stream (7) consisting of: - propane and/or propylene or isobutane and/or isobutene, according to whether acrylic acid or methacrylic acid is manufactured, and the products of the final oxidation of the mixture (1); - major quantities of water and acetic acid in the case of the manufacture of acrylic acid, or of water, acetic acid and acrylic acid in the case of the manufacture of methacrylic acid; and - (meth)acrolein; - at the bottom of said column (C1), a stream (4) consisting of: - (meth) acrylic acid; - the heavy absorption solvent or solvents; - the heavy products of side reactions; and - minor quantities of acetic acid and water, in the case of the manufacture of acrylic acid and acetic acid, acrylic acid and water in the case of the manufacture of methacrylic acid, the stream (4) issuing from the column (C1) is then sent to a separation column (C2) in which a separation is carried out to obtain: - at the top, a stream (5) consisting of light impurities which are sent to the bottom part of the absorption column (C1); and - at the bottom, a stream (6) consisting of: - (meth) acrylic acid in solution in the absorption solvent or solvents; - a small proportion of acetic acid in the
Full Text METHOD FOR PURIFYING (METH)ACRYLIC ACID OBTAINED BY
OXIDIZING A GAS SUBSTRATE
The present invention fits into the context of
a method for manufacturing (meth)acrylic acid according
to which a gas substrate (propane and/or propylene
and/or acrolein in the case of acrylic acid; isobutane
and/or isobutene and/or tert-butyl alcohol and/or
methacrolein in the case of methacrylic acid) is
oxidized by a catalytic or redox method, and the
(meth)acrylic acid is recovered from the hot reaction
gas mixture, by countercurrent absorption by a solvent.
The (meth)acrylic acid absorption methods
described use, as an absorption solvent, either water,
or an organic solvent, which is usually a hydrophobic
compound or a mixture of hydrophobic compounds with a
much higher boiling point than that of (meth)acrylic
acid.
Absorption methods using water provide an
aqueous (meth)acrylic acid solution which requires
numerous and costly purification steps to obtain pure
(meth)acrylic acid.
On the contrary, absorption methods using
hydrophobic organic solvents have the advantage over
aqueous methods of reducing the number of purification
steps necessary for obtaining pure (meth)acrylic acid.
These methods conventionally involve the successive
steps of absorption, stripping, removal of light
compounds, followed by final distillation of the pure
acrylic acid.
The present invention relates to the
substantially quantitative recovery (recovery yield >
98.5%.), in only three steps of (meth)acrylic acid that
is sufficiently stripped of its light impurities to
avoid an additional topping step. A second objective
of the invention is to achieve this recovery without
dilution of the uncondensed waste gas by an external
gas added in the stripping step, in order to reduce the
size of the column and the loss of unconsumed reactants
in the waste gas that must be purged. The third
objective is the recovery of pure (meth) acrylic acid
without any aqueous pollutant liquid release that is
difficult to remove.
The main method for synthesizing acrylic acid
uses a reaction of catalytic oxidation of propylene
with a mixture containing oxygen. This reaction is
generally carried out in the vapor phase, usually in
two steps, which may be carried out in two distinct
reactors or a single reactor:
the first step carries out the substantially
quantitative oxidation of the propylene to an
acrolein rich mixture, in which the acrylic acid
is a minority component;
the second step completes the conversion of
acrolein to acrylic acid.
The gas mixture issuing from the second oxidation
step consists of:
acrylic acid;
light compounds incondensable in the temperature
and pressure conditions commonly employed
(unconverted nitrogen, oxygen and propylene,
propane present in the reactive propylene, carbon
monoxide and dioxide formed in small quantities by
final oxidation);
light condensable compounds, particularly water,
generated by the propylene oxidation reaction,
unconverted acrolein, light aldehydes, such as
formaldehyde and acetaldehyde, and acetic acid,
the main impurity generated in the reaction
section;
heavy compounds: furfuraldehyde, benzaldehyde,
maleic anhydride, etc.
The method for synthesizing (meth)acrylic acid by
oxidation is identical in principle to that of acrylic
acid, except for the reactive substrate (which may be
isobutene or tert-butanol), the intermediate oxidation
product (methacrolein) and the types of light
condensable byproduct compounds (the reaction gas
mixture contains acrylic acid in addition to the light
compounds present in the reaction gas of the acrylic
acid synthesis method).
The second stage of manufacture consists in
recovering the acrylic acid from the hot gas mixture,
previously cooled to a temperature of 150-200°C, by
introducing this gas at the bottom of an absorption
column where it meets a countercurrent flow of solvent
introduced at the top of the column, and inside which
cooling, condensation, absorption and rectification
processes take place simultaneously.
In most of the methods described, the solvent
employed in this column is water or a high boiling
point hydrophobic solvent.
Regardless of the solvent used, the known
methods generally involve:
an absorption column, supplied at the top with
solvent, at the bottom of which the reaction gas
mixture is introduced, comprising a lower cooling
section and in which the gas upflow undergoes partial
condensation by meeting a descending liquid mixture
stream generally cooled through a heat exchanger, and
an upper section designed to absorb the maximum of
acrylic acid in the solvent;
a desorption column, supplied with the bottom
stream from the absorption column. The role of this
column is selectively to remove most of the light
compounds absorbed in the preceding step, particularly
the acrolein unconverted in the reaction step.
The lighter uncondensed compounds issuing from
the reaction gas are removed at the top of the
absorption column.
In order to recover part of the unconverted
reactants present in this stream, such as propylene and
acrolein, in the case of the method for synthesizing
acrylic acid, or isobutene and methacrolein in the case
of a method for manufacturing methacrylic acid, part of
the uncondensed gas stream at the top of the absorption
column is generally recycled to the reaction step, the
remainder being purged to prevent the holdup of
byproducts in the gas loop thus formed.
The maximum proportion of uncondensed gas
recycled to the reaction is also limited by economic
criteria: since the quantity of gas fed to the reactors
is limited by catalyst performance, the (meth)acrylic
acid productivity is decreased by dilution of the
reactive substrate.
Since (meth)acrylic acid is sensitive to
polymerization promoted by high temperatures, the
operating temperature in the desorption column is
generally limited, either by carrying out this
distillation at the temperature of the mixture under
reduced pressure, or by introducing an inert gas at the
bottom of a stripping column operating under
atmospheric pressure or reduced pressure, the two
methods serving to decrease the vapor pressure of the
condensable compounds, and consequently the temperature
of the liquid-gas equilibria governing the separation.
In the case of absorption methods using water
as an absorbent solvent, the raw (meth) acrylic acid
mixture recovered at the bottom of the desorption
column contains a high proportion of water, about 30-
50% by weight. Certain polar compounds, which display
a strong affinity for this solvent, such as carboxylic
acids, are absorbed in the water. This is particularly
the case of acetic acid (case of the synthesis of
acrylic acid) , or of acetic acid and acrylic acid (the
case of methacrylic acid synthesis) formed by a side
reaction during the reaction step, which passes
completely into this raw (meth)acrylic acid stream.
The separation of the majority impurities, that
is, water and acetic acid (case of the synthesis of
acrylic acid) or water, acetic acid and acrylic acid
(case of the synthesis of methacrylic acid) , in order
to obtain pure acrylic acid or pure methacrylic acid
respectively, is difficult. It requires a large number
of separation columns. The dehydration step is
generally carried out in the presence of a solvent
immiscible with water, in an extraction column or
heteroazeotropic distillation column, generally coupled
with a column for recovery of the solvent partially
solubilized in the extracted aqueous phase, in order to
recycle it upstream of the method. The step of removal
of the light compounds (topping) usually employs one or
two columns, and the step of separation of the heavy
compounds (tailing) is carried out in a final column,
from which the pure (meth) acrylic acid is extracted at
the top.
Absorption methods using a nonaqueous solvent
have the advantage of reducing the purification steps,
particularly by avoiding the use of heavy and costly
water separation methods, the use of hydrophobic
solvents making it possible to remove the water at the
top of the absorption column.
A further advantage of the nonaqueous
absorption methods described, over the water absorption
method, is to facilitate the removal of the light
compounds.
The role of the desorption column located
downstream of the absorption column is to reduce the
contents of light condensable compounds in the bottom
stream of the absorption column, particularly
unconverted acrolein, residual water and acetic acid
(case of the synthesis of acrylic acid) , or
methacrolein, water, acrylic acid and acetic acid (case
of methacrylic acid).
However, this removal of the light impurities
is not complete in the methods described in the prior
art. Thus, the method for purifying acrylic acid with
absorption by a mixture of diphenyl and diphenyl ether,
described in French patent FR-B-2 146 386, yields a raw
acrylic acid still containing 0.5% by weight of acetic
acid and 0.5% by weight of water. American patent USA-
5 426 221, describing a method with absorption of
acrylic acid by a mixture of diphenyl, diphenyl ether
and dimethyl phthalate, serves to improve the removal
of water (representing 0.04% by weight of the raw
acrylic acid distilled in the example) , but it still
leaves 0.26% by weight of acetic acid in the purified
acrylic acid without an additional topping step. The
method of absorption by carboxylic esters described in
French patent FR-B-2 196 986 serves to obtain a grade
of acrylic acid still containing 0.3% by weight of
acetic acid 0.2% by weight of water.
The grades of acrylic acid obtained by this
method are insufficient, in the absence of
supplementary purification, for the use of the monomer
in its conventional applications. To improve the
removal of the light compounds without adding an
additional column, • solutions have been proposed,
consisting in carrying out the topping in an upper
section added to the final acrylic acid distillation
column. Thus, European patent EP-B-706 986 mentions a
recovery column in which the acrylic acid is obtained
by a side drawoff, the upper section of the column
being used to concentrate the residual light compounds
at the top, in order to remove them. The major drawback
of such a method is the difficulty of separating the
light compounds, particularly acetic acid, thereby
requiring a significant increase in the number of trays
of the column and condensed flow rate returned to the
top (reflux) to ensure the separation and reduce the
loss of acrylic acid. This causes a substantial
increase in the size of the column, and hence in the
investment cost, where, at equivalent column size, a
decrease in the column distillation capacity.
Furthermore, this system generates a stream still
containing AA which, to avoid its loss, must be
recycled to a preceding step. This makes the method
even more complex and limits the capacity of the column
receiving this stream.
A further drawback of absorption methods using
heavy hydrophobic solvents is the fact that large
quantities of solvent are needed to absorb all the
acrylic acid present in the reaction gases. In French
patent FR-B-2 146 386, to reach a sufficient recovery
rate and avoid costly losses of unabsorbed acrylic
acid, the mass ratio of solvent (mixture of diphenyl
and diphenyl ether) to acrylic acid is about 9/1, or a
concentration of acrylic acid in the raw mixture after
absorption and desorption, of about 10%. The
consequences of the large size of the columns and
ancillary equipment and storage units, higher energy
costs associated with vaporization of high boiling
point solvent in the columns.
Moreover, the absorption methods using
nonaqueous solvents described in the literature have
the common feature of carrying out the desorption step
by stripping by an inert gas introduced at the bottom
of the column. This inert gas may be nitrogen, air or
part or all of the uncondensed gases at the top of the
absorption column. The quantity introduced generally
represents between 15% and 30% of the total gas input
issuing from the reaction step. The drawback of this
introduction of external gas is that, being sent to the
absorption column to recover the acrylic acid that it
contains, is added to the reaction gas which makes up
its main feed, and consequently, the maximum absorption
capacity of the column is thereby limited. Finally, and
for equivalent at production capacity, the size of the
absorption and stripping columns increases with the
flow rate of external gas introduced.
A further drawback of the method of stripping
by an external gas is to dilute the uncondensed gases
at the top of the column and consequently cause a
dilution of the part of these gases sent to the
reaction step in order to recover the noble compounds
that they contain (propylene, acrolein, traces of
acrylic acid) . Thus, for the same quantity of noble
compounds recycled in the absence of external stripping
gas, the flow of gases entering the reactor is
increased by the introduction of this external gas.
This results either in an increase in the flow rate of
gas fed to the reactors, at constant reactant flow
rate, causing accelerated aging of the catalysts due to
the higher operating temperature to obtain the same
yield performance, or, at constant flow rate of gas
entering the reactors, reduced productivity by
decreasing the flow rate of the reactants.
European patent EP 706 986, which describes a
method of absorption by nonaqueous solvent without a
desorption column, is incapable of obtaining the
efficient removal of the light compounds, particularly
acetic acid, claimed in the methods described with a
desorption column.
Finally, the patents described in the prior art
mention a water condensation section at the top of the
absorption column. The condensed aqueous stream is
particularly rich in polar compounds having
volatilities lower than or close to that of water,
particularly organic acids such as formic acid, acetic
acid and acrylic acid. Due to the pollutant nature of
this stream, it cannot be removed without subsequent
removal treatment, generally by incineration of the
organic compounds. The cost of this incineration
treatment is increased by the fact that the stream to
be treated is a liquid stream, consisting mainly of
water.
European Patent Application EP-A2-1 125 912
teaches a method for purifying acrylic acid comprising
a step of absorption by a heavy hydrophobic solvent,
followed by a distillation step in a column under
reduced pressure for topping, followed by distillation
to obtain the acrylic acid without the solvent.
According to this method, the mass flow rate of
heavy solvent is 0.2-4.5 times the mass flow rate of
acrylic acid, and the stream sent to the column under
reduced pressure contains acrylic acid at the rate of
18 to 75% by weight.
The applicant company has tried to further
improve the absorption efficiency and decrease the
proportion of acetic acid in the acrylic acid.
This purpose has been achieved by the choice of
a particular range of the solvent/(meth)acrylic acid
ratio and by carrying out the desorption step using a
rectification column that is distinguished from the
distillation column of European Application EP-A2-1 125
912 by the fact that it operates with a top feed,
without reflux, and by particular operating conditions
of this column, such as its distillate rate relative to
the flow rate of (meth)acrylic acid introduced into the
absorption column.
In the method according to European Patent
Application EP-A2-1 125 912, the two absorption and
distillation columns are independent. Due to its
operation with the high imposed reflux ratio
(preferably 3/1 to 6/1) , the distillate rate of the
distillation column sent to the absorption column,
relative to the rate of flow of acrylic acid flowing
into the latter column, is very low ( contrary, according to the present invention, the two
columns of absorption and rectification without reflux,
form an inseparable whole, the performance of one being
dependent on that of the other, and the composition of
the stream of the loop flowing between the bottom of Cl
and the top of C2 serves to improve the overall
separation performance.
Surprisingly, the overall performance is
improved in relation to the method according to EP-A2-1
125 912 despite the lower column efficiencies: the
absorption column has been estimated at 65-70
theoretical trays in the examples of the abovementioned
patent application, compared with 35-40 in the examples
of the invention; and the distillation column has 28
Oldershaw trays in the examples of the abovementioned
European Patent Application, compared with 15
perforated downcomer-type trays with equivalent
theoretical efficiency in the examples of the present
invention.
Furthermore, the use of a rectification column
without reflux, supplied at the top, has the advantage,
over a rectification column with reflux, of
significantly reducing the formation of polymers at the
top of the column, the (meth)acrylic acid concentration
in the liquid present on the upper trays being much
lower than in a rectification column.
The method in the present invention is
suitable, with only two columns (one absorption column,
one rectification column) for carrying out
simultaneously:
the recovery of (meth) acrylic acid with a yield
higher than 98.5%, advantageously higher than 99%;
the recovery of a stream of raw (meth)acrylic acid
concentrated in the solvent, containing at least
20% of (meth)acrylic acid;
the nearly complete removal of the light
compounds, particularly water and acetic acid
(case of the synthesis of acrylic acid) or water,
acetic acid and acrylic acid (case of the
synthesis of methacrylic acid), making it
possible, without an additional topping step, to
obtain a (meth)acrylic acid advantageously
containing less than 0.05% of water, less than
0.01% of acrolein and less than 0.1% of acetic
acid.
The percentage of (meth)acrylic acid obtained
in the bottom of the rectification column is
substantially 10-33% by weight, particularly 20% to 25%
by weight.
Moreover, since the rectification step is
carried out without the introduction of external inert
gas, the method described has the additional advantage
of reducing the size of the purification equipment and
facilitating the recycling of the uncondensed gases at
the top of the absorption column to the reaction step.
Finally, according to a particularly
advantageous embodiment, the uncondensed gas at the top
of the absorption column undergoes no condensation, and
is sent in gaseous form, partly to the reaction step
and partly to a purge treatment section (incineration).
This results in a substantial decrease in pollutant
aqueous releases and in the cost of the treatment of
the purge stream.
Thus the subject of the present invention is a
method for purifying (meth)acrylic acid obtained by
catalytic or redox oxidation, of a gas substrate
consisting of propane and/or propylene and/or acrolein
in the case of the manufacture of acrylic acid, and of
isobutane and/or isobutene and/or tert-butyl alcohol
and/or methacrolein in the case of the manufacture of
methacrylic acid, said gas mixture (1) mainly
consisting of:
propane and/or propylene or isobutane and/or
isobutene if previously contained by the substrate;
final oxidation products;
the desired (meth)acrylic acid;
(meth)acrolein;
tertbutyl alcohol in the case of the manufacture
of methacrylic acid;
water vapor;
acetic acid with, in the case of the manufacture
of methacrylic acid, acrylic acid as a byproduct; and
heavy products of side reactions,
according to which the reaction gas mixture (1) is sent
to the bottom of an absorption column (Cl) which is
supplied at the top and in countercurrent with at least
one heavy hydrophobic absorption solvent, to obtain:
at the top of the column (Cl) a gas stream (7)
consisting of:
propane and/or propylene or isobutane and/or
isobutene, according to whether acrylic acid or
methacrylic acid is manufactured, and the products of
the final oxidation of the mixture (1) ;
major quantities of water and acetic acid in the
case of the manufacture of acrylic acid, or of water,
acetic acid and acrylic acid in the case of the
manufacture of methacrylic acid; and
(meth)acrolein;
at the bottom of said column (Cl) , a stream (4)
consisting of:
(meth)acrylic acid;
the heavy absorption solvent or solvents;
the heavy products of side reactions; and
minor quantities of acetic acid and water, in the
case of the manufacture of acrylic acid and acetic
acid, acrylic acid and water in the case of the
manufacture of methacrylic acid,
the stream issuing from the column (Cl) is then sent to
a separation column (C2) in which a separation is
carried out to obtain:
at the top, a stream consisting of light
impurities which are sent to the bottom part of the
absorption column (Cl); and
at the bottom, a stream consisting of:
(meth)acrylic acid in solution in the absorption
solvent or solvents;
a small proportion of acetic acid in the case of
the manufacture of acrylic acid and acetic acid and of
acrylic acid in the case of the manufacture of
methacrylic acid;
the heavy products of side reactions; and
the polymerization inhibitor or inhibitors,
characterized in that the column (Cl) is operated with
a heavy solvent flow rate that is 3 to 5.6 times the
flow rate of (meth) acrylic acid in the feed gas
mixture, and in that, as a separation column (C2), a
rectification column is used, which is operated with a
flow feed and without reflux.
According to an advantageous feature of the
method of the invention, the column (C2) is operated
under conditions such that its distillate rate relative
to the flow rate of (meth) acrylic acid introduced into
the absorption column (Cl) is between 0.5/1 and 4/1,
particularly between 2/1 and 3/1.
An absorption column (Cl) is advantageously
used comprising:
in its lower part, at least one cooling section
(SI) equipped with a system for recirculating, via an
external heat exchanger (El), part of the stream
collected in the lower part of said section or sections
(SI) to send it to the flow of said sections; and
in its upper part, a section (S2) for the
absorption and rectification of the reaction gas
mixture.
A section (S2) in particular is used, in which
the number of theoretical plates is 25 to 50, and
preferably 30 to 45.
The absorption is carried out in the column
(Cl) generally at atmospheric pressure or under a
pressure close to atmospheric pressure, and
advantageously at a solvent introduction temperature of
20 to 80°C, preferably 30 to 60°C.
According to particular features of the method
of the invention, the column (Cl) is operated at a
bottom temperature of 50 to 120°C, particularly of 70
to 100°C; at a overhead head gas temperature of 40 to
70°C, particularly of 50 to 60 °C; and the reaction
gases are introduced at a temperature of 100 °C to
200°C, particularly of 130°C to 180°C.
The patent literature provides numerous
examples of heavy hydrophobic solvents. Advantageous
use is made of one or more heavy hydrophobic absorption
solvents having a boiling point above 200°C under
atmospheric pressure, ditolylether being particularly
preferred as a heavy hydrophobic solvent. The
absorption column (Cl) can be fed with one or more pure
solvents and/or with one or more solvents issuing from
the recycling of one or more streams obtained from the
subsequent purification steps.
The absorption is generally carried out in the
column (Cl) in the presence of at least one
polymerization inhibitor, selected in particular from
phenolic derivatives such as hydroquinone and its
derivatives such as methyl ether of hydroquinone,
phenothiazine and its derivatives, such as methylene
blue, quinones, such as benzoquinone, metal
thiocarbamates, such as copper dibutyldithiocarbamate,
compounds with nitroso groups, such as N-nitrosophenylhydroxylamine,
amines such as derivatives of
paraphenylenediamine, or N-oxyl compounds, such as 4-
hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethy1-piperidine-N-oxyl.
According to a first embodiment of the method
of the invention, the gas stream issuing from the top
of the column (Cl) is removed partly to the reaction
section, and partly to an incineration or purge step.
According to a second embodiment of the method
of the invention, the gas stream issuing from the top
of the column (Cl) is sent to the bottom of a
condensation section (S3) where this gas mixture is
placed in intimate contact with a descending liquid
stream fed at the top of said section (S3) and
consisting of the recycling of part of the bottom
stream of said section (S3) previously cooled by an
external heat exchanger (E4).
The diagrams appended hereto illustrate the
invention (Figures 1 and 2).
Figure I shows a first embodiment. The
reaction gas mixture issuing from the oxidation of
propylene arid acrolein (in the case of the manufacture
of acrylic acid) or from the oxidation of isobutene and
methacrolein (in the case of the manufacture of
methacrylic acid), mainly consists of:
on the one hand, incondensable compounds in the
operating pressure conditions of the column:
propylene, final oxidation products (CO, C02) ;
on the other, condensable compounds: acrylic acid,
acrolein, water and acetic acid in the case of the
manufacture of acrylic acid, or methacrylic acid,
methacrolein, water, acrylic acid and acetic acid
in the case of the manufacture of methacrylic
acid, heavier side reaction products in very small
quantities,
is sent (stream 1) to the bottom of an absorption
column Cl fed at the top and in countercurrent with a
solvent (stream 2: heavy hydrophobic solvent with a
boiling point above 200°C under atmospheric pressure).
Preferably, the column comprises:
in its lower part, one or more cooling sections S1
equipped with systems for recirculating, through
one or more external heat exchangers El, part of
the stream collected in the lower part of SI
(stream 3), to send it to the top of this section;
in its upper part, a section S2 in which the
absorption and rectification of the mixture is
carried out.
The solvent feed is provided above the section
S2. The solvent introduced may be a pure solvent or
may issue from a recycling of a stream obtained in the
subsequent purification steps. Preferably, the column
Cl operates under a pressure close to atmospheric
pressure.
The stream 4 obtained at the bottom of the
column Cl mainly consists of acrylic acid and solvent,
and small quantities of acetic acid, water and
acrolein. This stream 4, of which the temperature may
optionally be adjusted through a heat exchanger E2, is
then stripped of these light impurities (desorption
step) by sending it to the top of a distillation column
C2 in which they are concentrated at the top, in a
mixture with acrylic acid and traces of solvent. The
gas stream 5 is condensed through a heat exchanger E3
and sent to the column Cl, at a place located in the
lower part thereof, preferably in one of the cooling
loops S1. The stream 6 obtained at the bottom of
column C2 then mainly consists of acrylic acid in
solution in the solvent, and heavy impurities, issuing
from side reactions, present in small quantities in the
reaction gas stream.
Advantageously, the column C2 operates under
reduced pressure and the gas used for the desorption of
the light compounds is generated by boiling the column
bottom mixture through a heat exchanger (boiler).
The gas stream 7 issuing from the column Cl
contains the compounds initially present in the
reaction gas and not absorbed: incondensable products
at the operating pressure of the column (propylene, CO,
CO2 in the case of the manufacture of acrylic acid;
isobutene, GO, C02, in the case of the manufacture of
methacrylic acid), water, acrolein or methacrolein
according to whether acrylic acid or methacrylic acid
is manufactured, acetic acid in the case of the
manufacture of acrylic acid, or acetic acid and acrylic
acid in the case of the manufacture of methacrylic
acid.
According to the first embodiment (Figure 1) ,
the gas stream 7 issuing from the top of the column Cl
contains all the water, formic acid, acetic acid and
acrolein, which are directly removed, partly to the
reaction section (stream 8), to complete the conversion
of the noble reactants that it contains, and partly
(stream 9) to an incineration (purge) treatment step.
According to a second embodiment (Figure 2) ,
the ascending gas stream issuing from the section S2 of
column Cl is sent to the bottom of a condensation
section S3 where this gas mixture is placed in intimate
contact with a descending liquid stream (stream 7), fed
at the top of this section, and consisting of the
recycling of part of the bottom stream from section S3
previously cooled by a heat exchanger E4.
The section S3 may also consist of a distinct
column in series with the column Cl. The gas stream 9
from the top of section S3 contains the compounds
present in the gas stream issuing from the top of
section S2, except part of the water and all the formic
acid, acetic acid (case of the manufacture of acrylic
acid) or acetic and acrylic acids (case of the
manufacture of methacrylic acid), which are removed in
the stream 8. Most of the stream 9 will be
advantageously recycled to the reaction step (stream
10), to convert the noble reactants which it contains,
and a slight purge of this stream (stream 11) can be
carried out to prevent holdup in the loop thus formed
of the incondensable compounds resulting from the final
oxidation of the propylene (CO, C02) and the nitrogen
from the air introduced in the reaction step.
EXAMPLES
In these Examples, the following abbreviations
have been used:
- AA : acrylic acid;
- AcOH : acetic acid;
- AGO : acrolein;
- DTE : ditolylether;
- EMHQ : hydroquinone methyl ether
The examples described below illustrate the
invention. The percentages are indicated as mass
percentages.
Example 1
The experimental rig used is the one shown in
Figure 1 in the drawing appended hereto.
The gas mixture fed to the absorption column Cl
is representative of a reaction medium issuing from the
second stage of a reactor for oxidizing propylene to
acrylic acid. It consists of condensable compounds:
- AA : 14.1%;
- AcOH : 0.8%;
- AGO : 0.45%;
- H20 : 7.81%
and incondensable inert compounds:
- N2 : 69.83%;
- O2 : 2.5%;
- propylene : 1.2%;
- C02 : 3.31%.
This gas mixture is sent at a rate of 709 g/h,
at a temperature of 165 °C, to the bottom of a glass
column Cl, having an overall efficiency of 42
theoretical trays, and consisting of a lower cooling
section S1 equipped with five perforated trays with
downcomer, and an upper absorption-distillation section
S2 equipped with 14 Sulzer type packing elements EX.
The reaction gas is fed at the bottom of the lower
cooling section SI.
The column Cl is fed at the top of its upper
section S2 with a stream consisting of DTE, at a flow
rate of 400 g/h (solvent/acrylic acid ratio in the
reaction gas = 4/1), in which 0.1% of EMHQ has been
previously dissolved as polymerization inhibitor. The
temperature of introduction of the absorption solvent
is 54°C.
The operating pressure in the column Cl is
atmospheric pressure. The temperature measured at the
bottom of the column Cl is 84 °C. The temperature is
52°C at the top of this column Cl.
To analyze all the organic compounds entrained
in the flow gas stream, it is absorbed in a scrubbing
column where it meets a large countercurrent stream of
water (13 700 g/h) at a temperature of 20°C.
The acetic acid recovered at the top represents
98.7% of initial acetic acid, and acrylic acid, 0.3% of
the initial acrylic acid (acrylic acid recovery yield:
99.7%).
Part of the liquid stream obtained at the
bottom of section SI of the absorption column Cl is
sent via a pump through a double jacket heat exchanger
El, where it is cooled to 70°C, at the top of section
SI.
The remainder of the mixture obtained at the
bottom of section S1 is cooled through a heat exchanger
E2, to a temperature of 35 °C, and is then sent via a
pump to the top of a glass column C2, equipped with 15
perforated trays with downcomer, for a total efficiency
of 11 theoretical trays. The column C2 is provided at
the bottom with a thermosiphon boiler and at the top of
a condenser E3.
The distillation is carried out in this column
C2 under reduced pressure of 187 hPa (140 mmHg) . The
temperature measured at the bottom of column C2 is
113°C, and the temperature at the top reaches 88°C.
All the vapors condensed in the heat exchanger
E3 (318 g/h, or a mass ratio of distillate rate
relative to the flow rate of acrylic acid introduced
into the column Cl of 3.2/1) is sent via a pump to the
external cooling loop of the column Cl, upstream of the
pump which recirculates the bottom mixture of section
S1, through the heat exchanger El, to the top of the
section.
The liquid stream extracted at the bottom of
this column C2 (497.6 g/h), contains 20.2% of acrylic
acid. After distillation to separate the solvent, the
acrylic acid obtained at the top of the column contains
0.068% of acetic acid, less than 0.01% of acrolein and
less than 0.01% of water.
Example 2
The experimental rig is identical to that of
the preceding Example 1.
The column Cl operates under atmospheric
pressure, while the operating pressure of the column C2
is 187 hPa (140 mmHg).
A gas mixture with the same composition is fed
with the same flow rate to column Cl in its lower part,
at a temperature of 165°C.
The flow rate of DTE introduced at a
temperature of 53 °C at the top of column Cl is now
reduced to 300 g/h (solvent/acrylic acid ratio in the
reaction gas = 3/1).
The column top temperature is 51 °C, and the
bottom temperature is 77°C. The top and bottom
temperatures for column C2 are 83 °C and 111°C
respectively. Part of the bottom stream of column Cl
sent to the top of section SI is cooled to 68°C through
the heat exchanger El. The remainder of the liquid
stream from the bottom of column Cl fed to the column
C2 is previously cooled to 34°C. The mass ratio of the
distillate rate of the column C2 relative to the flow
rate of acrylic acid fed to the column Cl is 3.3/1.
The acetic acid and acrylic acid recovered
after absorption of the water stripping column
(17 600 g/h) respectively represent 98.6% and 0.9% of
the initial compounds (acrylic acid recovery yield:
99.1%).
The acrylic acid concentration in the bottom
stream of column C2 reaches 24.5%. After separating
the solvent by distillation, the acrylic acid obtained
only contains 0.087% of acetic acid and less than 0.01%
of acrolein and water.
Example 3
In the same conditions of experimental rig,
pressure, temperature, composition and input gas flow
rate as in Example 1, the acrylic acid is absorbed by a
countercurrent stream on DTE fed at the top of the
column at a flow rate of 560 g/h (solvent/acrylic acid
ratio in the reaction gas: 5.6/1) and at a temperature
of 50°C.
The column flow temperature is 51.6°C, and the
bottom temperature is 82°C. The flow and bottom
temperatures of column C2 are 86.4°C and 120.5°C
respectively. The part of the stream of column Cl sent
to the top of section S1 is cooled to 69°C through the
heat exchanger El. The remainder of the bottom liquid
stream of column Cl is fed to column C2 at a
temperature of 61°C. The mass ratio of the distillate
rate of column C2 relative to the flow rate of acrylic
acid fed to the column Cl is 1.1/1.
The stream obtained at the bottom of column C2
contains 15.1% of acrylic acid. After separating the
solvent by distillation, the acetic acid concentration
in the acrylic acid obtained is 0.058%, and this stream
contains less than 0.01% of acrolein and water.
The acetic acid and acrylic acid recovered
after absorption in the water stripping column
(21 120 g/h) represent 99.55% and 0.4% of the initial
compounds (acrylic acid recovery yield: 99.6%).
Example 4 (Comparative)
In the same conditions of experimental rig,
pressure, temperature, composition and input gas flow
rate as in Example 1, the acrylic acid is absorbed by a
countercurrent stream DTE fed at the top of the column
at a flow rate of 100 g/h (solvent/acrylic acid ratio
in the reaction gas = 1/1) and a temperature of 45°C.
The column flow temperature is 52.6°C, and the
bottom temperature is 78.9°C. The top and bottom
temperatures of column C2 are 84.9°C and 104.4°C
respectively. The part of the stream of column Cl sent
to the top of section SI is cooled to 70°C through the
heat exchanger El. The remainder of the bottom liquid
stream of column Cl is fed to column C2 at a
temperature of 74°C. The mass ratio of the distillate
rate of column C2 relative to the flow rate of acrylic
acid fed to the column Cl is 3.9/1.
The stream obtained at the bottom of column C2
contains 44.6% of acrylic acid. After separating the
solvent by distillation the acetic acid concentration
in the acrylic acid obtained is 0.045%, and this stream
contains less than 0.01% of acrolein and water.
The acetic acid and acrylic acid recovered
after absorption in the water stripping column
(19 550 g/h) represent 99.35% and 17.2% of the initial
compounds. The acrylic acid recovery yield is
therefore particularly low: 82.2%.
To try to improve this recovery yield, the
experiment was repeated in identical conditions, apart
from the fact that the column Cl contained three
additional SULZER EX elements in its section S2. The
total efficiency of the column was then 50 theoretical
trays.
On completion of the test, the performance was
not significantly improved: acetic acid concentration
in the distilled acrylic acid: 0.054%, and acrylic acid
recovery yield: 84%.
A third attempt to improve the acrylic acid
recovery yield, in the same conditions as described
above, but reducing the solvent feed temperature of the
top of the column Cl to 20°C, also terminated in
failure. In the operating conditions under atmospheric
pressure of the absorption column, the removal of the
light compounds of the top of the column became
impossible, thereby causing the holdup of these light
compounds of the column bottom, the flooding of the
column C2 and the rapid formation of polymers in this
latter column.
Example 5 (Comparative)
This example is carried out in the same
conditions of pressure, temperature, composition and
flow rate of input gas as in Example 1. The rig is the
same as in Example 1, apart from the fact that the
absorption column was equipped with 17 SULZER EX
elements in section S2, equivalent to a total
efficiency of the column Cl of 50 theoretical trays.
The acrylic acid was absorbed by a countercurrent
stream of ditolylether fed at the top of the column at
a flow rate of 233 g/h (solvent/acrylic acid ratio in
the reaction gas = 2.33/1) and a temperature of 45°C.
The column Cl flow temperature is 51.5°C, and
the bottom temperature is 76.9°C. The flow and bottom
temperatures of column C2 are 83.3°C and 108.5°C
respectively. The part of the stream of column Cl
bottom sent to the top of section SI is cooled to 75°C
through the heat exchanger El. The remainder of the
bottom liquid stream of column Cl is fed to column C2
at a temperature of 35 °C. The mass ratio of the
distillate rate of column C2 relative to the flow rate
of acrylic acid fed to the column Cl is 3/1.
The stream obtained at the bottom of column Cl
contains 29.5% of acrylic acid. After separating the
solvent by distillation the acetic acid concentration
in the acrylic acid obtained is 0.06%, and this stream
contains less than 0.01% of acrolein and water.
The acetic acid and acrylic acid recovered
after absorption in the water stripping column
(18 540 g/h) respectively represent 99.04% and 3% of
the initial compounds. The acrylic acid recovery yield
therefore remains low: 97%, despite the increased
efficiency of the column Cl.
Example 6
The principle of the method employed in this
third example is that of Figure 2 appended hereto. The
columns Cl and C2 are identical, operating at the same
pressures as in the preceding examples, and an
additional partial condensation column C3 (equivalent
to the section S3 in Figure 2) , operating at
atmospheric pressure, is placed in a series at the top
of the column Cl, in order to remove the organic
compounds entrained in the top gas stream of this
column, in the form of an aqueous stream.
The reaction gas mixture (709 g/h) of the same
composition as in the preceding examples is introduced
at a temperature of 164°C into column Cl. The DTE is
fed to this column Cl at the top, at a rate of 300 g/h,
at a temperature of 53°C. The respective temperatures
at the top and bottom of column Cl are 51°C and 77°C,
those of column C2 are 83°C (flow) and 111°C (bottom) .
The bottom stream of column Cl in the recirculation
loop at the top of section SI is cooled to 68°C through
the heat exchanger El. The remainder of this bottom
stream of column Cl is fed to column C2 at a
temperature of 32°C. The mass ratio of the distillate
rate of the column C2 relative to the flow rate of
acrylic acid fed to the column Cl is 1.9/1.
The liquid stream obtained at the bottom of
column C2 (raw acrylic acid) contains 24.5% of acrylic
acid. After distillation to remove the solvent, the
pure acrylic acid obtained contains 0.08% of acetic
acid, less than 0.01% of water and less than 0.01% of
acrolein.
The gas stream extracted from the top of column
C2 is sent to the bottom of the condensation column C3,
where it encounters an aqueous countercurrent stream
formed by the recirculation, to the top of column S3,
and through a heat exchanger E4, of part of the stream
recovered at the bottom of this column. The
temperature of the uncondensed gases at the top of this
section is 42°C. A purge of 22.3 g/h (or 35% of the
water present in the initial reaction gas) is carried
out at the recirculation loop of this column. This
purged aqueous mixture contains 11.24% of acetic acid
(or 49% of the initial acetic acid) and 0.08% of
acrolein (or 0.56% of the initial acrolein).
The gas stream leaving the top of the
condensation column is sent in countercurrent with a
high flow of water (18 250 g/h) in a stripping column
intended to quantify the losses of organic products in
the uncondensed stream at the top of S3. All the
acetic acid and the acrylic acid recovered at the top
of column C2 (condensation column and stripping column)
respectively represents 98.5% and 0.9% of the compounds
present in the initial reaction gas (acrylic acid
recovery yield: 99.1%).




WE CLAIM:
1. A method for purifying (meth) acrylic acid obtained by catalytic or redox oxidation, of a gas substrate consisting of propane and/or propylene and/or acrolein in the case of the manufacture of acrylic acid, and of isobutane and/or isobutene and/or tertbutyl alcohol and/or methacrolein in the case of the manufacture of methacrylic acid, said gas mixture (1) mainly consisting of:
- propane and/or propylene or isobutane and/or isobutene if previously contained by the substrate, of the kind such as herein described;
- final oxidation products;
- the desired (meth)acrylic acid;
- (meth)acrolein;
- tertbutyl alcohol in the case of the manufacture of methacrylic acid;
- water vapor;
- acetic acid with, in the case of the manufacture of methacrylic acid, acrylic acid as a byproduct; and
- heavy products of side reactions,
- according to which the reaction gas mixture (1) is sent to the bottom of an absorption column (C1) which is supplied at the top and in countercurrent with at least one heavy hydrophobic absorption solvent of the kind such as herein described, to obtain:
- at the top of the column (C1) a gas stream (7) consisting of:
- propane and/or propylene or isobutane and/or isobutene, according to whether acrylic acid or methacrylic acid is manufactured, and the products of the final oxidation of the mixture (1);
- major quantities of water and acetic acid in the case of the manufacture of acrylic acid, or of water, acetic acid and acrylic acid in the case of the manufacture of methacrylic acid; and
- (meth)acrolein;
- at the bottom of said column (C1), a stream (4) consisting of:
- (meth) acrylic acid;
- the heavy absorption solvent or solvents;
- the heavy products of side reactions; and

- minor quantities of acetic acid and water, in the case of the manufacture of acrylic
acid and acetic acid, acrylic acid and water in the case of the manufacture of
methacrylic acid,
the stream (4) issuing from the column (C1) is then sent to a separation column (C2) in which a separation is carried out to obtain:
- at the top, a stream (5) consisting of light impurities which are sent to the bottom part of the absorption column (C1); and
- at the bottom, a stream (6) consisting of:
- (meth) acrylic acid in solution in the absorption solvent or solvents;
- a small proportion of acetic acid in the case of the manufacture of acrylic acid and acetic acid and of acrylic acid in the case of the manufacture of methacrylic acid;
- the heavy products of side reactions; and
- the polymerization inhibitor or inhibitors, wherein the column (C1) is operated with a heavy solvent flow rate that is 3 to 5.6 times the flow rate of (meth)acrylic acid in the feed gas mixture, and in that, as a separation column (C2), a rectification column is used, which is operated with a flow feed and without reflux;
wherein the absorption is carried out in the column (C1) at atmospheric pressure or
under a pressure close to atmospheric pressure, and at a solvent introduction
temperature of 20 to 80°C;
wherein the reaction gases are introduced at a temperature of 100°C to 200oC;
wherein the absorption is carried out in the column (C1) in the presence of at least one
polymerization inhibitor;
wherein the column (C2) is operated under conditions such that its distillate rate
relative to the flow rate of (meth)acrylic acid introduced into the absorption column
(C1) is between 0.5/1 and 4/1 and without the introduction of external inert gas.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the column (C2) is operated under conditions such that its distillate rate relative to the flow rate of (meth) acrylic acid introduced into the absorption column (C1) is between 2/1 and 3/1.
3. The method as claimed in any of the preceding claims, wherein the column (C1) is operated with a solvent flow rate is 3 to 4 times the flow rate of (meth) acrylic acid in the feed gas mixture.

4. The method as claimed in any of the preceding claims 1 to 3, wherein an absorption
column (C1) is used comprising:
- in its lower part, at least one cooling section (S1) equipped with a system for recirculating, via an external heat exchanger (E1), part (3) of the stream (4) collected in the lower part of said section or sections (S1) to send it to the flow of said sections; and
- in its upper part, a section (S2) for the absorption and rectification of the gas mixture
(1).
5. The method as claimed in claim 4, wherein a section (S2) is used, in which the number of theoretical plates is 25 to 50, and preferably 30 to 45.
6. The method as claimed in any one of the preceding claims 1 to 5, wherein the absorption is carried out in the column (C1) at atmospheric pressure or under a pressure close to atmospheric pressure, and at a preferred solvent introduction temperature of 30 to 60°C.
7. The method as claimed in any one of proceeding claims, wherein the column (C1) is operated at a bottom temperature of 50 to 120°C, particularly of 70 to 100°C.
8. The method as claimed in any of the preceding claims 1 to 7, wherein the column (C1) is operated at a overhead gas temperature of particularly of 50 to 60°C.
9. The method as claimed in any of preceding claims 1 to 8, wherein the reaction gases are preferably introduced at a temperature of 130°C to 80° C.
10. The method as claimed in any of preceding claims 1 to 9, wherein one or more heavy hydrophobic absorption solvents are used, having a boiling point above 200°C at atmospheric pressure.
11. The method as claimed in claim 10, wherein ditolylether is used as a heavy hydrophobic solvent.

12. The method as claimed in any of the preceding claims 1 to 11, wherein the absorption column (C1) is fed with one or more pure solvents and/or with one or more solvents issuing from the recycling of one or more streams obtained from the subsequent purification steps.
13. The method as claimed in any of the preceding claims 1 to 12, wherein the said polymerization inhibitor is selected in particular from phenolic derivatives such as hydroquinone and its derivatives such as methyl ether of hydroquinone, phenothiazine and its derivatives, such as methylene blue, quinones, such as benzoquinone, metal thiocarbamates, such as copper dibutyldithiocarbamate, compounds with nitroso groups, such as N-nitrosophenylhydroxylamine, amines such as derivatives of paraphenylenediamine, or N-oxyl compounds, such as 4hydroxy-2, 2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl.
14. The method as claimed in any of preceding claims 1 to 13, wherein the gas stream (7)
issuing from the top of the column (C1) is removed, partly to the reaction section, and
partly to an incineration or purge step.
15. The method as claimed in any of preceding of claims 1 to 13, wherein in that the gas stream (7) issuing from the top of the column (C1) is sent to the bottom of a condensation section (S3) where this gas mixture is placed in intimate contact with a descending liquid stream (7') supplied at the flow of said section (S3) and consisting of the recycling of part of the bottom stream of said section (S3) previously cooled by an external heat exchanger (E4).

Documents:

2420-DELNP-2006-Abstract-(09-01-2012).pdf

2420-delnp-2006-abstract.pdf

2420-DELNP-2006-Claims-(09-01-2012).pdf

2420-delnp-2006-claims.pdf

2420-DELNP-2006-Correspodence Others-(09-01-2012).pdf

2420-delnp-2006-correspondence- others.pdf

2420-delnp-2006-description (complete).pdf

2420-DELNP-2006-Drawings-(09-01-2012).pdf

2420-delnp-2006-drawings.pdf

2420-delnp-2006-form-1.pdf

2420-delnp-2006-form-2.pdf

2420-DELNP-2006-Form-3-(09-01-2012).pdf

2420-delnp-2006-form-3.pdf

2420-delnp-2006-form-5.pdf

2420-DELNP-2006-GPA-(09-01-2012).pdf

2420-delnp-2006-gpa.pdf

2420-DELNP-2006-Petition-137-(09-01-2012).pdf

abstract.jpg


Patent Number 251550
Indian Patent Application Number 2420/DELNP/2006
PG Journal Number 12/2012
Publication Date 23-Mar-2012
Grant Date 22-Mar-2012
Date of Filing 01-May-2006
Name of Patentee ARKEMA,
Applicant Address 4-8, COURS MICHELET, F-92800 PUTEAUX, FRANCE.
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 MICHEL FAUCONET 1, RUE DES CHAMPS, F-57730, VALMONT, FRANCE.
2 DENIS LAURENT, 7, RUE DU MISSOURI, F-57500 SAINT-AVOLD, FRANCE.
PCT International Classification Number C07C 51/48
PCT International Application Number PCT/FR2004/002481
PCT International Filing date 2004-10-01
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 03.12906 2003-11-04 France