Petrochemicals
Under petrochemicals (including petrochemistry , by ancient Greek Petros , Rock 'and Latin oleum , oil') refers to the production of chemical products from natural gas and the appropriate fractions of the oil .
history
The economic development during the Second World War suddenly caused a shortage of natural products (e.g. rubber ) that had to be substituted with artificial substitutes. The switch from coal to petrochemicals first took place in the USA and was mostly stormy.
United States | Japan | Western Europe | FRG | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | 0.01 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
1930 | 6th | 0 | 0 | 0 |
1941 | 21st | 0 | 0 | 0 |
1950 | 50 | 0 | 4th | 2 |
1960 | 88 | 4th | 58 | 50 |
1965 | 94 | 74 | 68 | 61 |
1971 | 96 | 93 | 91 | 91 |
Economical meaning
Petrochemical plants have often been built near refineries because of their reliance on naphtha . The cracker capacity in Germany is approx. 5.8 million tons, the European cracker capacity is approx. 26.3 million tons. Ethylene producers and consumers are often connected by ethylene pipelines to compensate for fluctuations in production. The production of petrochemical products in Western Europe, Asia and North and South America in 2006 amounted to 55.3 million tons for ethylene , 35.6 million tons for propylene and 27.8 million tons for benzene . The petrochemicals turnover in Germany in 2007 was around 66 billion euros.

Basic products and processes
The most important process in petrochemicals is steam cracking , in which ethane , LPG , naphtha , hydrowax , gas oil or other suitable hydrocarbons are cracked with residence times in the millisecond range, usually 200 to 500 ms, and temperatures between 800 and 850 ° C in the presence of steam. The gas phase of the steam cracker products contains the basic chemicals ethylene , propylene , the C4 cut (mainly butene , isobutene and 1,3-butadiene ) and isoprene . The liquid phase mainly contains aromatics ( benzene , toluene and xylenes ) and is also used as pyrolysis gasoline .
The steam reforming of refinery gases or light naphtha mainly supplies carbon monoxide and hydrogen for the production of methanol , ammonia , acetic acid and hydrogenation processes.
Procedure | Goal of the process | Process conditions | Other characteristics | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pressure (bar) | Temperature (* C) | catalyst | Reaction component | |||
Thermal visbreaking | Process Lowering the viscosity of vacuum residues, easy conversion | 5-18 | 450-480 | / | / | simple conversion process; low investment |
Delayed coking | Production of gasoline and middle distillates | 5 | 480 | / | / | inevitable accumulation of petroleum coke |
Thermal cracking | Production of gasoline and medium distillates from heavy gasol | 50 | 500 | / | / | is still used occasionally today |
Thermal reforming | Increasing the octane number of gasoline | 40 | 520 | / | / | out of date today; replaced by catalytic reforming |
Steam cracking | Production of olefins | atmosphere | 850-900 | H 2 O | Joint production of high-aromatic pyrolysis gasoline and pyrolysis oil | |
High temperature coking | Manufacture of metallurgical coke | atmosphere | 1200 | / | / | Joint production of the aromatic raw materials tar and crude benzene |
Bitumen oxidation | Increasing the plasticity of bitumen | atmosphere | 280-300 | / | O 2 | continuous process; is also used to blow pitch |
Coal gasification | Generation of synthesis gas | 20-30 | Max. 1000 | / | O 2 , H 2 O | Aromatics accumulation in the smoldering area only with countercurrent flow of the reactants coal and air / steam |
Hydrocracking | Conversion of heavy oil distillates into gasoline and middle distillate | 70-150 | 350-450 | Mon, W | H 2 | very flexible conversion process; high investment, was originally developed for carbohydrate hydrogenation |
Catalytic Reforming | Increasing the octane number of straight-run gasoline | 20th | 500 | Pt, Ir, Re | most important source of aromatics in the USA; Hydrogen source | |
Catalytic Cracking (FCC) | Conversion of heavy oil distillates into gasoline and middle distillates | 0.5-1 | 500 | Zeolite | great importance for gasoline production, especially in the USA |
Follow-on products
A large number of intermediate and end products are manufactured from the basic chemicals through various processes.
The most important secondary products are:
-
Ethylene :
-
Polyethylene - e.g. B. Ziegler-Natta method
- approx. 21% of the total ethylene production in LDPE
- approx. 13% as LLDPE
- approx. 23% as HDPE
- Ethanol - through the addition of water
-
Ethylene oxide (EO) - through catalytic oxidation (approx. 11% of ethylene production)
-
Ethylene glycol - by reacting EO with water
- Antifreeze - contain ethylene glycol
- Polyester - through esterification of ethylene glycol with bifunctional acids
- Polyethylene glycols - by reacting EO with glycols
- Ethoxylates - by reaction of EO with alcohols
- Monoethanolamine , diethanolamine , triethanolamine through reaction with ammonia
-
Ethylene glycol - by reacting EO with water
- Vinyl acetate monomer (approx. 2% of ethylene production)
-
1,2-dichloroethane - by chlorination (approx. 14% of ethylene production)
- Trichlorethylene - by chlorination
- Tetrachlorethylene - also called perchlorethylene; used as a cleaner in “dry cleaning” and as a degreasing agent
-
Vinyl chloride - monomer for polyvinyl chloride
- Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) - a widely used plastic
-
α-olefins
- Poly-α-olefins as lubricants
- Co-monomers for polyethylene
- Fatty alcohols for detergents and cleaning agents
-
Polyethylene - e.g. B. Ziegler-Natta method
-
Propylene :
-
Acrylic acid
- Acrylic polymers
-
Allyl chloride
- Epichlorohydrin - for epoxy resins
- Isopropyl alcohol - 2-propanol; solvent
- Acrylonitrile - monomer for acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS) polymer (approx. 6% of total propylene production)
- Polypropylene - e.g. B. by Ziegler-Natta process (approx. 57% of the total propylene production)
-
Propylene oxide (PO) - by oxidation (approx. 12% of the total propylene production)
- Propylene glycol - reaction of PO and water
- Glycol ether - by reacting PO with propylene glycol
-
Acrylic acid
-
Butene - Monomers and Co-Monomers
- Isobutene - by reaction with methanol to form MTBE and as a monomer for copolymerization with isoprene
-
1,3-butadiene - monomer or co-monomer for polymerisation into elastomers
- Rubber - made from various dienes or chlorinated dienes
-
Benzene :
-
Ethylbenzene - from benzene and ethylene (approx. 7% of ethylene production)
-
Styrene - from dehydrogenation of ethylbenzene; Monomer
- Polystyrene - Polymers made from styrene
-
Styrene - from dehydrogenation of ethylbenzene; Monomer
-
Cumene - isopropylbenzene from benzene and propylene; Raw material for the cumene process (approx. 7% of the total propylene production)
- Phenol - by oxidation of cumene
- Acetone - by oxidation of cumene
-
Bisphenol A - for making epoxy resins
- Epoxy resins
- Polycarbonates - made from bisphenol A and phosgene
- solvent
-
Cyclohexane - by hydrogenation
-
Adipic acid copolymer for nylon.
- Nylon - polyamide made from adipic acid and diamines
-
Caprolactam - an amide used to make nylon
- Nylon - by polymerizing caprolactam
-
Adipic acid copolymer for nylon.
-
Nitrobenzene - by nitrating benzene
-
Aniline - by hydrogenation of nitrobenzene
- Methylenediphenyl diisocyanate (MDI) - co-monomer for the production of polyurethanes
-
Aniline - by hydrogenation of nitrobenzene
-
Dodecylbenzene - a raw material for the manufacture of detergents and cleaning agents
- Detergents - often contain salts of dodecylbenzenesulfonic acid
- Chlorobenzene
-
Ethylbenzene - from benzene and ethylene (approx. 7% of ethylene production)
-
Toluene :
- benzene
- Toluene diisocyanate (TDI) - co-monomer for the production of polyurethanes
- Benzoic acid - by oxidation of toluene
- Xylene
See also
Web links
- Homepage of the Association of Petrochemical Producers in Europe (APPE)
- Homepage of the Association of the Chemical Industry
- Brochure aromatics improve your quality of life (PDF file; 1.25 MB)
- Benjamin Steininger: A cornucopia of the 20th century In: “Project 100 Years of the Present” (publisher: House of World Cultures ), November 29, 2017: “The culture and media theorist Benjamin Steininger from the Beauty of Oil group explains the merging of the Coal has been in the petrochemical industry since the 1920s and outlines its far-reaching consequences from World War II to the present day. "
Individual evidence
- ↑ The Book of Petroleum, 1978.
- ↑ Statistics of the APPE ( Memento of the original from August 19, 2008 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. .
- ↑ ChemgaPedia steam cracking .
- ^ Heinz-Gerhard Franck, Jürgen Walter Stadelhofer: Industrial Aromatic Chemistry: Raw Materials · Processes · Products . Springer, 1987, ISBN 978-3-662-07876-1 , pp. 100-101 .