Product Code Database
Example Keywords: dungeon master -programming $12
barcode-scavenger
   » Wiki: Industrial Gas
Tag Wiki 'Industrial Gas'.
Tag

Industrial gases are the materials that are for use in industry. The principal gases provided are , , , , , and , although many other gases and mixtures are also available in gas cylinders. The industry producing these gases is also known as industrial gas, which is seen as also encompassing the supply of equipment and technology to produce and use the gases. Their production is a part of the wider chemical Industry (where industrial gases are often seen as "specialty chemicals").

Industrial gases are used in a wide range of industries, which include oil and gas, , chemicals, power, , , , , , pharmaceuticals, , , , , , and . Industrial gas is sold to other industrial enterprises; typically comprising large orders to industrial clients, covering a size range from building a process facility or pipeline down to cylinder gas supply.

Some scale business is done, typically through tied local agents who are supplied . This business covers the or of gas cylinders and associated equipment to and occasionally the general public. This includes products such as balloon helium, dispensing gases for , welding gases and welding equipment, LPG and .

sales of small scale gas supply are not confined to just the industrial gas companies or their agents. A wide variety of hand-carried small gas containers, which may be called cylinders, bottles, cartridges, capsules or canisters are available to supply LPG, butane, propane, carbon dioxide or nitrous oxide. Examples are whipped-cream chargers, , and .


Early history of gases
The first gas from the natural environment used by humans was almost certainly when it was discovered that blowing on or fanning a fire made it burn brighter. Humans also used the to foods and from boiling water to cook foods. has been known from ancient times as the byproduct of fermentation, particularly for beverages, which was first documented dating from 7000 to 6600 B.C. in , . was used by the Chinese in about 500 B.C. when they discovered the potential to transport gas seeping from the ground in crude pipelines of bamboo to where it was used to boil sea water. was used by the Romans in winemaking as it had been discovered that burning made of sulfur inside empty wine vessels would keep them fresh and prevent them gaining a vinegar smell.

Early understanding consisted of empirical evidence and the of ; however with the advent of scientific method and the of , these gases became positively identified and understood. The history of chemistry tells us that a number of gases were identified and either discovered or first made in relatively pure form during the Industrial Revolution of the 18th and 19th centuries by notable in their . The timeline of attributed discovery for various gases are carbon dioxide (1754), hydrogen (1766), nitrogen (1772), nitrous oxide (1772), oxygen (1773),

(1997). 9780941901123, Chemical Heritage Foundation. .
ammonia (1774), chlorine (1774), methane (1776), hydrogen sulfide (1777),Carl Wilhelm Scheele, Chemische Abhandlung von der Luft und dem Feuer (Chemical treatise on air and fire) (Upsala, Sweden: Magnus Swederus, 1777), § 97: Die stinckende Schwefel Luft (The stinking sulfur air i.e.,), pp. 149-155. carbon monoxide (1800), hydrogen chloride (1810), acetylene (1836), helium (1868) fluorine (1886), argon (1894), krypton, neon and xenon (1898) and radon (1899).

Carbon dioxide, hydrogen, nitrous oxide, oxygen, ammonia, chlorine, sulfur dioxide and manufactured fuel gas were already being used during the 19th century, and mainly had uses in , , medicine, and for and . For example, was being made from 1772 and commercially from 1783, chlorine was first used to bleach textiles in 1785 and was first used for dentistry anaesthesia in 1844. At this time gases were often generated for immediate use by chemical reactions. A notable example of a generator is which was invented in 1844 and could be used to generate gases such as hydrogen, , chlorine, acetylene and carbon dioxide by simple gas evolution reactions. Acetylene was manufactured commercially from 1893 and acetylene generators were used from about 1898 to produce gas for and , however electricity took over as more practical for lighting and once LPG was produced commercially from 1912, the use of acetylene for cooking declined.

Once gases had been discovered and produced in modest quantities, the process of industrialisation spurred on and of to produce larger quantities of these gases. Notable developments in the industrial production of gases include the electrolysis of water to produce hydrogen (in 1869) and oxygen (from 1888), the for oxygen production which was invented in the 1884, the chloralkali process to produce chlorine in 1892 and the to produce ammonia in 1908.

The development of uses in refrigeration also enabled advances in and the liquefaction of gases. Carbon dioxide was first liquefied in 1823. The first Vapor-compression refrigeration cycle using was invented by in 1834 and a similar cycle using was invented in 1873 and another with sulfur dioxide in 1876. and were both first made in 1883; was first made in 1898 and in 1908. LPG was first made in 1910. A patent for was filed in 1914 with the first commercial production in 1917.

Although no one event marks the beginning of the industrial gas industry, many would take it to be the 1880s with the construction of the first high pressure . Initially cylinders were mostly used for carbon dioxide in or dispensing of beverages. In 1895 refrigeration compression cycles were further developed to enable , most notably by Carl von Linde

(1997). 9780941901123, Chemical Heritage Foundation. .
allowing larger quantities of oxygen production and in 1896 the discovery that large quantities of acetylene could be dissolved in and rendered nonexplosive allowed the safe bottling of acetylene. History – Acetylene dissolved in acetone . Aga.com. Retrieved on 2012-11-26.

A particularly important use was the development of and metal cutting done with oxygen and acetylene from the early 1900s. As production processes for other gases were developed many more gases came to be sold in cylinders without the need for a .


Gas production technology
plants air in a separation process and so allow the bulk production of and in addition to oxygen - these three are often also produced as . To achieve the required low temperatures, an Air Separation Unit (ASU) uses a refrigeration cycle that operates by means of the Joule–Thomson effect. In addition to the main air gases, air separation is also the only practical source for production of the , and .

Cryogenic technologies also allow the liquefaction of , and . In natural-gas processing, cryogenic technologies are used to remove nitrogen from natural gas in a Nitrogen Rejection Unit; a process that can also be used to produce from natural gas where natural gas fields contain sufficient helium to make this economic. The larger industrial gas companies have often invested in extensive libraries in all fields of their business, but particularly in cryogenics.

The other principal production technology in the industry is Reforming. is a used to convert natural gas and into a containing and with as a . Partial oxidation and autothermal reforming are similar processes but these also require oxygen from an ASU. Synthesis gas is often a precursor to the chemical synthesis of ammonia or . The carbon dioxide produced is an and is most commonly removed by . This separated carbon dioxide can potentially be sequestrated to a carbon capture reservoir or used for Enhanced oil recovery.

Air Separation and hydrogen reforming technologies are the cornerstone of the industrial gases industry and also form part of the technologies required for many fuel ( including IGCC), and Fischer-Tropsch gas to liquids schemes. Hydrogen has many production methods and may be almost a if produced by water electrolysis (assuming the electricity is produced in nuclear or other low carbon footprint power plant instead of reforming natural gas which is by far dominant method). One example of displacing the use of hydrocarbons is Orkney; see for more information on hydrogen's uses. is used by NASA in the as a . Simpler technologies, such as membranes or used in pressure swing adsorption or vacuum swing adsorption are also used to produce low purity air gases in nitrogen generators and . Other examples producing smaller amounts of gas are chemical oxygen generators or oxygen concentrators.

In addition to the major gases produced by air separation and syngas reforming, the industry provides many other gases. Some gases are simply byproducts from other industries and others are sometimes bought from other larger chemical producers, refined and repackaged; although a few have their own production processes. Examples are hydrogen chloride produced by burning hydrogen in chlorine, nitrous oxide produced by thermal decomposition of when gently heated, for the production of fluorine, chlorine and hydrogen, and electrical to produce from air or oxygen.

Related services and technology can be supplied such as , which is often provided in hospital gas systems; ; or . Another unusual system is the inert gas generator. Some industrial gas companies may also supply related , particularly liquids such as , hydrogen fluoride and .


Gas distribution

Mode of gas supply
Most materials that are gaseous at ambient temperature and pressure are supplied as compressed gas. A is used to compress the gas into storage (such as , gas cylinders or tube trailers) through systems. Gas cylinders are by far the most common gas storage [3]. Linde.com. Retrieved on 2015-12-07. and large numbers are produced at a facility.

However, not all industrial gases are supplied in the gaseous phase. A few gases are that can be liquefied at ambient temperature under alone, so they can also be supplied as a liquid in an appropriate container. This also makes these gases useful as ambient and the most significant industrial gases with this property are (R717), (R290), (R600), and (R764). Chlorine also has this property but is too toxic, corrosive and reactive to ever have been used as a refrigerant. Some other gases exhibit this phase change if the ambient temperature is low enough; this includes (R1150), (R744), (R170), (R744A), and sulfur hexafluoride; however, these can only be liquefied under pressure if kept below their critical temperatures which are 9 °C for C2H4 ; 31 °C for CO2 ; 32 °C for C2H6 ; 36 °C for N2O ; 45 °C for SF6. All of these substances are also provided as a gas (not a vapor) at the 200 bar pressure in a gas cylinder because that pressure is above their critical pressure.

Permanent gases (those with a critical temperature below ambient) can only be supplied as liquid if they are also cooled. All gases can potentially be used as a refrigerant around the temperatures at which they are liquid; for example nitrogen (R728) and methane (R50) are used as refrigerant at cryogenic temperatures.

Exceptionally can be produced as a cold known as , which sublimes as it warms in ambient conditions, the properties of carbon dioxide are such that it cannot be liquid at a pressure below its of 5.1 bar.

Acetylene is also supplied differently. Since it is so unstable and explosive, this is supplied as a gas dissolved in acetone within a in a cylinder. Acetylene is also the only other common industrial gas that sublimes at atmospheric pressure.


Gas delivery
The major industrial gases can be produced in bulk and delivered to customers by pipeline, but can also be packaged and transported.

Most gases are sold in and some sold as liquid in appropriate containers (e.g. Dewars) or as delivered by truck. The industry originally supplied gases in cylinders to avoid the need for local gas generation; but for large customers such as or , a large gas production plant may be built nearby (typically called an "on-site" facility) to avoid using large numbers of cylinders manifolded together. Alternatively, an industrial gas company may supply the to produce the gas rather than the gas itself. An industrial gas company may also offer to act as under an operations and maintenance contract for a gases facility for a customer, since it usually has the experience of running such facilities for the production or handling of gases for itself.

Some materials are dangerous to use as a gas; for example, fluorine is highly reactive and industrial chemistry requiring fluorine often uses hydrogen fluoride (or hydrofluoric acid) instead. Another approach to overcoming gas reactivity is to generate the gas as and when required, which is done, for example, with .

The delivery options are therefore local gas generation, pipelines, bulk transport (truck, , ), and in gas cylinders or other containers.

Bulk liquid gases are often transferred to end user . Gas cylinders (and liquid gas containing vessels) are often used by end users for their own small scale distribution systems. Toxic or flammable gas cylinders are often stored by end users in for protection from external fire or from any leak.


Gas cylinder color coding
Despite attempts at standardization to facilitate user and first responders' safety, no universal coding exists for cylinders with industrial gases, therefore several color coding standards are in usage. In most developed countries of the world, notably countries of European union and United Kingdom, EN 1089-3 is used, with cylinders of liquefied petroleum gas being an exception.

In United States of America, no official regulation of color coding for gas cylinders exists and none is enforced.


What defines an industrial gas
Industrial gas is a group of materials that are specifically manufactured for use in industry and are also gaseous at ambient temperature and pressure. They are which can be an or a chemical compound that is either or inorganic, and tend to be low molecules. They could also be a of individual gases. They have value as a chemical; whether as a , in process enhancement, as a useful end product, or for a particular use; as opposed to having value as a "simple" .

The term “industrial gases” is sometimes narrowly defined as just the major gases sold, which are: nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, argon, hydrogen, acetylene and helium. Many names are given to gases outside of this main list by the different industrial gas companies, but generally the gases fall into the categories "specialty gases", “medical gases”, “” or “refrigerant gases”. However gases can also be known by their uses or industries that they serve, hence "welding gases" or "", etc.; or by their source, as in "air gases"; or by their mode of supply as in "packaged gases". The major gases might also be termed "bulk gases" or "tonnage gases".

In principle any gas or gas mixture sold by the "industrial gases industry" probably has some industrial use and might be termed an "industrial gas". In practice, "industrial gases" are likely to be a pure compound or a mixture of precise chemical composition, packaged or in small quantities, but with high purity or tailored to a specific use (e.g. ). Lists of the more significant gases are listed in "The Gases" below.

There are cases when a gas is not usually termed an "industrial gas"; principally where the gas is processed for later use of its rather than manufactured for use as a chemical substance or preparation.

The oil and gas industry is seen as distinct. So, whilst it is true that natural gas is a "gas" used in "industry" - often as a fuel, sometimes as a feedstock, and in this generic sense is an "industrial gas"; this term is not generally used by industrial enterprises for produced by the petroleum industry directly from natural resources or in an . Materials such as LPG and LNG are complex mixtures often without precise chemical composition that often also changes whilst stored.

The petrochemical industry is also seen as distinct. So petrochemicals (chemicals derived from ) such as are also generally not described as "industrial gases".

Sometimes the chemical industry is thought of as distinct from industrial gases; so materials such as ammonia and chlorine might be considered "chemicals" (especially if supplied as a liquid) instead of or sometimes as well as "industrial gases".

Small scale gas supply of hand-carried containers is sometimes not considered to be industrial gas as the use is considered personal rather than industrial; and suppliers are not always gas specialists.

These demarcations are based on perceived boundaries of these industries (although in practice there is some overlap), and an exact scientific definition is difficult. To illustrate "overlap" between industries:

Manufactured (such as ) would historically have been considered an industrial gas. is often considered to be a petrochemical; although its production is a core industrial gases technology. Similarly, projects harnessing or , schemes, as well as Hydrogen Production all exhibit overlapping technologies.

Helium is an industrial gas, even though its source is from natural gas processing.

Any gas is likely to be considered an industrial gas if it is put in a gas cylinder (except perhaps if it is used as a fuel)

Propane would be considered an industrial gas when used as a refrigerant, but not when used as a refrigerant in LNG production, even though this is an overlapping technology.


Gases

Elemental gases
The known chemical elements which are, or can be obtained from natural resources (without transmutation) and which are gaseous are hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, plus the noble gases; and are collectively referred to by chemists as the "elemental gases".[4]. socratic.org. Retrieved on 2018-08-28. These elements are all primordial apart from the noble gas which is a trace radioisotope which occurs since all isotopes are radiogenic nuclides from radioactive decay. These elements are all .

(Synthetic elements have no relevance to the industrial gas industry; however for scientific completeness, note that it has been suggested, but not scientifically proven, that metallic elements 112 () and 114 () are gases.)

The elements which are stable at standard temperature and pressure (STP), are hydrogen (H2), nitrogen (N2) and oxygen (O2), plus the fluorine (F2) and chlorine (Cl2). The are all .

In the industrial gases industry the term "elemental gases" (or sometimes less accurately "molecular gases") is used to distinguish these gases from molecules that are also chemical compounds.

Radon is chemically stable, but it is and does not have a . Its most stable , 222Rn, has a of 3.8 days. Its uses are due to its radioactivity rather than its chemistry and it requires specialist handling outside of industrial gas industry norms. It can however be produced as a by-product of uraniferous ores processing. Radon is a trace naturally occurring radioactive material (NORM) encountered in the air processed in an ASU.

Chlorine is the only elemental gas that is technically a since STP is below its critical temperature; whilst and mercury are liquid at STP, and so their vapor exists in equilibrium with their liquid at STP.


Other common industrial gases
This list shows the other most common gases sold by industrial gas companies.

There are many gas mixtures possible.


Important liquefied gases
This list shows the most important liquefied gases:


Industrial gas applications
The uses of industrial gases are diverse.

The following is a small list of areas of use:


Companies


See also

External links
Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
4s Time