dimitris
Chemical
- Oct 11, 2001
- 19
I am a process engineer woring at an Ammonia plant.
The necessary H2 for the NH3 production is performed with Catalytic Steam Reforming and the purification of the gas stream is done in a Pressure Swing Adosrption multivessel Unit. Lately the performance of the adsorbers has decreased. We suspect tha gaseous ammonia entered the vessels. The adsorbents used are activated carbon at the bottom part and synthetic zeolites at the top part of the vessel. (Gas enters the bottom of the vessel and exits from the top). Does anybody know if gaseous ammonia can cause permanent deactivation on synthetic zeolites adosorbing ability? What about liquid ammonia too?
The necessary H2 for the NH3 production is performed with Catalytic Steam Reforming and the purification of the gas stream is done in a Pressure Swing Adosrption multivessel Unit. Lately the performance of the adsorbers has decreased. We suspect tha gaseous ammonia entered the vessels. The adsorbents used are activated carbon at the bottom part and synthetic zeolites at the top part of the vessel. (Gas enters the bottom of the vessel and exits from the top). Does anybody know if gaseous ammonia can cause permanent deactivation on synthetic zeolites adosorbing ability? What about liquid ammonia too?