Raw Material for Organic Chemical Industries
Introduction
Chemical process industry play an important role in the development of a country by providing a wide variety of products, which are being used in providing basic needs of rising population which is 6.4 billion globally and 1.2 billion in India in 2012. Chemical process industries uses raw material derived from petroleum and natural gas, salt, oil and fats, biomass and energy from coal, natural gas and a small percentage from renewable energy resources. Although initially manufacture of organic chemicals initially started with coal and alcohol from fermentation industry, however later due to availability of petroleum and natural gas dominated the scene and now more than 90% of organic chemicals are produced from petroleum and natural gas routes. However, rising cost of petroleum and natural gas and continuous decrease in the reserves has spurred the chemical industry for alternative feedstock like coal, biomass, coal bed methane, shale gas, sand oil as an alternate source of fuel and chemical feedstock.
Energy Resources
Energy play vital role an important role for the development of any country and to meet the challenges due to increasing population it has become one of the very important to optimize its use and look for alternative energy resources. Coal remains the dominant source of energy meeting 52.4% of India’s prime energy needs while oil and natural gas met 41.6% of energy requirement in 2008-09. Power sector accounted for 77% of the non-coking coal off-take. As per planning commission projections till 2032, coal will continue to have a dominant share meeting over 50% of primary commercial requirement [Dutta, 2011]. World and India Energy consumption scenario is given in Figure M-I 2.1 [Hindu Industrial directory, 2007]. The world energy consumption had projected to increase by 58% over a 24 year period from 2001 to 2025. The total energy use projected to grow from 404 in 2001 to 640 quadrillion BTU in 2025 [Energy outlook, 2003]. India’s requirement for fossil fuels by 2030 is estimated by various agencies is in the range of 337 to 462 million tones of oil, 99 to 184 million tones oil equivalent of gas and 602 to 954 million tones of coal Indian energy’s [Hindu industrial directory, 2007].
World 74.5 Bnbbl OE India 2.7 Bnbbl OE
Figure M-I 2.1: Indian Energy Scenario
Sources: Hindu industrial directory, 2007
Raw Materials for Organic Chemical Industries
Although initially manufacture of organic chemicals initially started with coal and alcohol from fermentation industry, however later due to availability of petroleum and natural gas dominated the scene and now more than 90% of organic chemicals are produce from petroleum and natural gas routes. However, rising cost of petroleum and natural gas and continuous decrease in the reserves as spurred the chemical industry for alternative feedstock like coal, biomass, coal bed methane, shale gas, sand oil as alternate source of fuel and chemical feedstock. Table M-I 2.1 gives the details of raw materials for chemical process industries. Raw materials for chemical industries are classified as primary raw materials and basic intermediates. Although major organic chemicals are produced from petroleum feed stock, however alternative raw materials are available which are getting attention. Detail of feedstock for organic chemical industries is shown in Figure M-I 2.2. Table M-I 2.2 shows the details of natural gas and petroleum fractions as petrochemicals feedstock. Alternative Routes to Principal Organic Chemicals is given Table M-I 2.3
Table M-I 2.1: Raw Material for Chemical Process Industries Primary Raw Materials:
Gaseous | Natural gas, condensate, refinery gases, coal Bed methane, gas hydrate |
Liquids | Naphtha, kerosene, gas oil, middle distillates |
Solids | Coal, coke, wax, residues |
Oils and fats | Tallow and coconut oil, palm oil and other oil |
Biomass | Alcohol, paper, energy, |
Salt | Chlorine, caustic soda, soda ash |
Sulphur | Sulphuric acid, fertilizer, |
Lime stone | Cement, lime |
Basic Intermediates:
Paraffins | Methane , propane, butane and higher hydrocarbons |
| Ethylene, propylene, butadiene , alcohol, vinyl chloride |
Olefins and derivatives | Ethylene, propylene,, butadiene , alcohol, vinyl chloride |
Aromatics | Benzene Toluene Ethyl benzene, Xylenes, Naphthalene |
Secondary Intermediates:
Monomer: Caprolactam, adipic acid, hexamethylene diamine, terephthalic acid and acrylonitrile for synthetic fibres, intermediates for dye stuff industry and pesticides.
Figure M-I 2.2: Feed Stock for Organic Chemical Industries
Table M-I 2.2: Natural Gas and Petroleum Fractions as Petrochemicals Feedstock
Petroleum Fractions and Natural Gases | Source | Composition | Intermediate Processes | Intermediate Feedstock |
Refinery Gases | Distillation, catalytic cracking, catalytic reforming | Methane, ethane, propane, butane, BP upto 25 oC | Liquefaction, cracking | LPG, ethylene propylene, butane, butadiene. |
Naphtha | Distillation and thermal & catalytic cracking, visbreaking | C4-C12 hydrocarbon, BP 70 - 200 o C | Cracking, reforming, alkylation, disproportiona tion, isomerisation | Ethylene, propylene, butane, butadiene, benzene, toluene, xylene |
Kerosene | Distillation and secondary conversion processes | C9-C10 hydrocarbon, BP 175-275 o C | Fractionation to obtain C10-C14 range hydrocarbon | Linear n C10 - n C14 alkanes |
Gas Oil | Distillation of crude oil and cracking | C10-C25 hydrocarbons BP 200-400 o C | Cracking | Ethylene, propylene, butadiene, butylenes |
Wax | Dewaxing of lubricating oil | C8-C56 hydrocarbon | Cracking | C6-C20 alkanes |
Pyrolysis Gasoline | Ethylene cracker | Aromatic, alkenes, dienes, alkanes, cycloalkane | Hydrogenation distillation, extraction, crystallisation, adsorption | Aromatics |
Natural Gases & Natural Gas Condensate | Gas fields and crude oil stabilisation | Hydrogen, methane, ethane, propane, pentane, aromatics | Cracking, reforming, separation | Ethylene, propylene, LPG, aromatics, etc. |
Petroleum Coke | Crude oil | Carbon | Residue upgradation processes,gasifi- cation | Carbon electrode, acetylene, fuel |
Chemicals | Petroleum Source | Alternate Source |
Methane | Natural gas, Refinery light gases (de-methaniser overheads) | Coal, as by-product of separation of coke oven gases (1920-30) or of coal hydrogenation (1930-40) |
Ammonia | Methane Light liquid hydrocarbons | From coal via water gas (1910-20) |
Methyl alcohol | Methane Light liquid hydrocarbons | From coal via water-gas (1920-30); from methane (from coal) by methane-stream and methane oxygen processes (1930-40) |
Ethylene | Pyrolysis of gaseous liquid hydrocarbons | Dehydration of ethyl alcohol (original route). By-product in fractional distillation of coke oven gas (1925-35). Hydrogenation of acetylene (1940-45) |
Acetylene | Ethane | Calcium carbide (original process). methane from coal by partial combustion and by arc process(1935-45) |
Ethylene glycol | Ethylene | From ethylene made as above (1925). In America, from coal via carbon-monoxide and formaldehyde (1935-40) |
Ethyl alcohol | Synthetic ethyl alcohol , | Fermentation of molasses (original route) |
Acetaldehyde | Co-product of paraffin gas oxidation. Direct oxidation of ethylene | Fermentation of ethyl alcohol, or acetylene from carbide (1900-10) |
Acetone | Propylene | Wood distillation (original process). Pyrolysis of acetic acid (1920-30) or by acetylene- stream reaction (1930-40) |
Glycerol | Propylene | By-product of soap manufacture (original process) |
Butadiene | 2-Butenes Butane Synthetic ethyl alcohol By-product of ethylene by pyrolysis of liquid hydrocarbons | Ethyl alcohol (1915); acetaldehyde via 1:3- butanediol (1920-30); acetylene and formaldehyde from coal via 1:4-butanediol (1940-45); from 2:3-Butanediol by fermentation (1940-45) |
Aromatic hydrocarbons | Aromatic-rich and naphthenic- rich fractions by catalytic reforming and direct extraction or by hydro-alkylation | By-products of coal-tar distillation |
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