Posts Tagged ‘SWAP’

National Chemistry Week Seminar : Can a chemical reaction help fight global warming?

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Could a Sour Natural Gas Process Convert Carbon Dioxide (CO2) and Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S) into harmless compounds?

Attend discussion on if an exothermic chemical reaction could contribute in the fight against global warming and climate change.

WHAT:

The Stenger Wasas Process (SWAP): A suite of hydrocarbon refining solutions that, in the laboratory, has been verified to rapidly reduce H2S to below detectable limits by gas chromatography (under 4ppb) and may be able to convert CO2 into carbon, water and sulfur industrially.  Discoverers of the SWAP invite academicians and experts to discuss the science and its potential contributions to the global warming solution.

WHERE:

Philip Alampi Auditorium, Rutgers University Cook Campus
School of Environmental and Biological Sciences
71 Dudley Road (corner of College Farm and Dudley Rd.)
New Brunswick, NJ

WHEN: Wed., Oct. 21

2:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m.

RSVP:             www.swapsol.com/events.php

Open Admission      Q & A Following

WHO:

Raymond Stenger and James Wasas invite members of the academic and professional communities on Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2009, to learn about the Stenger-Wasas Process (SWAP), proposing that a reaction between carbon dioxide (CO2) and hydrogen sulfide (H2S) eliminates both (2H2S + CO2 => 2H2O + 2S + C) in a mildly exothermic reaction and could alter the course of global warming and impact escalating energy costs.  Hear and discuss the science behind the SWAP and its potential impact on the hydrocarbon industry.

PARTICIPANTS

  • Raymond Stenger (B.S.,WV University ‘57)
  • James Wasas (B.S., Rutgers ‘68)
  • Wolf Koch, Ph.D, Chemical Engineering, University of Cincinnati (B.S., Rutgers ‘68), President, Technology Resources International, Inc.
  • Gene Hall, Ph.D, Analytical Chemistry, Rutgers University (independent GC verification)
  • Randa Fahmy-Hudome, Former U.S. Associate Deputy Energy Secretary

Stenger and Wasas will discuss the catalytic and recombinant science behind the reaction.  Dr. Wolf Koch will discuss the potential commercial applications.  Q & A will follow: Dr. Hall will answer questions about his independent chemical and gas chromatography (GC) analysis; Executives will answer questions about findings and verifications of thermodynamic and chemical kinetic results showing scalability of the SWAP.

If you would like to attend, please visit: www.swapsol.com/events.php

Can sulfur recovery breakthroughs reduce our environmental footprint?

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

There has been a recent discovery of a previously unknown exothermic reaction between CO2 and H2S.  It’s a reaction that may fundamentally alter the hydrocarbon industry.  Work continues.  It’s called the Stenger-Wasas Process (SWAP) developed by Ray Stenger and Jim Wasas.  And it may make obsolete traditional petroleum methods, such as the Claus Process and its variants.

The SWAP: Unrefined sour natural gas is fed into the catalytic reactor, where the SWAP reaction occurs between CO2 and H2S. Refined gas flows past the separator. CO2 and H2S are converted into water, sulfur and carbon in the collector. In a reaction that can start in less than one second at very moderate temperatures, the result of the SWAP is refined natural gas.

Brief Overview

Sulfur contaminants such as hydrogen sulfide (H2S), carbonyl sulfide (COS), and mercaptans in gas streams can create unacceptable levels of sulfur emissions in power applications or poison catalysts used in chemical synthesis. Sulfur contaminants are usually reduced to less than 300 ppm for power generation and considerably lower (<1 ppm) for the synthesis of methanol, ammonia, and Fischer-Tropsch (FT) liquids.

Sulfur recovery unit (courtesty: C&I)

Sulfur recovery unit (courtesy: C&I)

Sulfur Recovery Processes

Removing sulfur from a natural gas or syngas process stream is only part of the story. The residual sulfur present in an acid gas stream must then be recovered to prevent environmental and safety harms, as well as meet operator permit requirements. Two main technologies have traditionally been used commercially to recover sulfur: the Claus process (partial combustion) for high levels of sulfur, and catalytic Redox processes, for relatively low levels of sulfur. In recent years, bio-chemical based technology, the Thiopaq Process, has been developed and commercially implemented. Other recent developments include the development of hybrid processes that combine Claus and Redox technology and are used for tailgas cleanup in Claus plants.

The SWAP has been verified by gas chromatography in the laboratory to reduce H2S to below the limit of detection (about 4ppb) in a single pass through the SWAP column.

The SWAP in the laboratory

The SWAP in the laboratory

Classified as hazardous waste by the EPA, H2S disposal requires expensive processing, i.e. the Claus Process. The SWAP may reduce related capital costs for the H2S disposal resulting from crude oil desulfurization, while simultaneously eliminating substantial amounts of CO2.

CLAUS PROCESS

Technology Description

In the Claus process, a high H2S concentration stream is the feedstock for recovery to elemental sulfur. Roughly 1/3 of the H2S is burnt (partial combustion) to form sulfur dioxide (SO2). The remaining H2S reacts with the synthesized SO2 over an alumina or bauxite catalyst to produce elemental sulfur. Depending on their concentrations, the unreacted components (tail gas), such as residual SO2, CO2, and H2S, are either emitted, thermally oxidized, or further treated in an additional recovery process.

(US Environmental Protection Agency, AP42, 5th Edition, “Compilation of AirPollutant Emissions Factors Volume 1: Stationary Point and Area Sources, 1995) The Claus process is thermodynamically limited to ~97 percent sulfur recovery, although additional treatment steps, such as tail gas sulfur recovery, can increase the recovery rate.

Commercial Manufacturers and Applications

The Claus process is the oldest commercial sulfur treatment process, with development dating back to the late 19th century. Today, Claus processes are the main step used for elemental sulfur production worldwide-in fact, 90 percent to 95 percent of the sulfur recovered in the United States was from the Claus process. Almost 40 companies operate over 1000 Claus processes in the United States, recovering nearly 9 million tons per year of sulfur. The petroleum and natural gas industries are the main users of the technology, with IGCC applications making up a small but growing segment of the user population.

With catalytic refining, environmental footprint and operational costs can be lowered. This and other breakthroughs may change the landscape of hydrocarbon refining.  www.swapsol.com