Liquid Nitrogen
Liquid Nitrogen
Liquid Nitrogen
LIQUID NITROGEN
REACTION COOLING
Choosing the right refrigeration system is critical
to a safe and economical process.
By Jon Trembley and
Svetlana Ivanova, Air Products
and a higher refrigeration capacity per mass unit than CO2 (figures 1 and
2). Liquid nitrogen may provide a design engineer more confidence in
the cooling system's control as well as allow a chemist the full flexibility
needed when choosing which synthesis route to follow.
There are three primary options for cooling reaction vessels with LIN:
Direct.
Semi-indirect.
Indirect.
Each method has advantages and disadvantages (figure 3).
Direct injection of LIN achieves maximum efficiency and is inexpensive
to install, but solvent entrainment, foaming and localized freezing can
occur. This option often is used in emergency situations because vaporizing LIN can quickly provide rapid cooling to the reaction process should
an unsafe or runaway situation occur.
In a semi-indirect method, heat transfer takes place by flowing liquid
nitrogen either through a coil inside a reactor or through a reactor cooling
jacket. The main benefits of this method include accurate temperature
control, the ability to reuse the nitrogen, and simplicity. Drawbacks include
reduced efficiency, demand on reactor volume, and the expense of the
cryogenic construction and corrosion-resistant materials.
Indirect heat transfer occurs in systems where LIN is exchanged with a
suitable heat transfer fluid in an external heat exchanger. This approach
has the most system flexibility, provides accurate temperature control
and accommodates large heat loads. Many reaction processes already
utilize a heat transfer fluid/medium that is either cooled or heated
accordingly to provide flexibility in multi-step reaction processes.
Regardless of the method used, one of the important considerations
when using LIN for cooling purposes is a properly designed supply system that minimizes nitrogen loss at all the stages and ensures good qual-
References
1. ASHRAE Refrigeration Handbook, Ultra-low Temperature
Refrigeration, Chapter 39 (2002).
2. Capacitance: Key Design Consideration for Refrigerated Central
Cooling Systems for Batch Process Plants, Pharmaceutical Engineering,
Vol. 21, No. 4 (2002).
3. Nitrogen: A Security Blanket for the Chemical Industry, Chemical
Engineering Progress, 107 (11), pp. 50-55 (Nov. 2011).
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Reprinted with permission from Process Cooling, October 2012 2013, BNP Media.
312-13-005-US