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Exxon donor solvent

W. R. Eppedy and J. W. Taunton, "Exxon Donor Solvent Coal Liquefaction Process Development," paper presented at Coal Dilemma II ACS Meeting, Colorado Spriags, Colo., Feb. 12, 1979. [Pg.99]

W. N. Mitchell, K. L. Trachte, md S. Zaczepinski, "Performance of Low-Rank Coals in the Exxon Donor Solvent Process," paper presented at / 0th Biennial Eignite Symposium, Grmd Porks, N.D., May 1979. [Pg.161]

Fig. 17. Schematic diagram of the coal hquefaction section of the Exxon donor solvent (EDS) process. To convert MPa to psi, multiply by 145. Fig. 17. Schematic diagram of the coal hquefaction section of the Exxon donor solvent (EDS) process. To convert MPa to psi, multiply by 145.
Several processes progressed to demonstration scales but have not been commercialized, primarily because of economic inabiHty to compete with available petroleum products. The H-Coal process developed by Hydrocarbon Research, Inc. was demonstrated at Catiettsburg, Kentucky using a 545 t/d plant and DOE support. The Exxon donor solvent Hquefaction process was not commercialized either. [Pg.237]

W. P. Epperly and T. W. Taunton, "Exxon Donor Solvent, Coal Liquefaction Process Development", Proceedings of the 13th Intersociety Energy Conversion Engineering Conference, Vol. [Pg.361]

The development of three-phase reactor technologies in the 1970 s saw renewed interest in the synthetic fuel area due to the energy crisis of 1973. Several processes were developed for direct coal liquefaction using both slurry bubble column reactors (Exxon Donor Solvent process and Solvent Refined Coal process) and three-phase fluidized bed reactors (H-Coal process). These processes were again shelved in the early 1980 s due to the low price of petroleum crudes. [Pg.585]

Exxon Donor Solvent Also known as EDS. A coal liquifaction process in which coal in solution in tetrahydronaphthalene is hydrogenated, using a cobalt/molybdenum/alumina catalyst. So-called because the hydrogen is donated by the tetrahydronaphthalene to the coal. Developed from the Pott-Broche process. Piloted by Exxon Research Engineering Company in the 1970s and operated at 250 ton/day in the Exxon refinery in Baytown, TX, from 1980 to 1982. [Pg.103]

Pott-Broche A coal liquifaction process in which coal is dissolved in a mixture of tetrahy-dronaphthalene and cresols, and then hydrogenated. Invented by A. Pott and H. Broche at IG Farbenindustrie, Germany in 1927 used by the Ruhrol Company in Germany between 1938 and 1944. See also Exxon Donor Solvent. [Pg.214]

The Exxon Donor Solvent (EDS) Process, developed by the Exxon Research and Engineering Co., differed from the typical process in that, before being recycled, the solvent was hydrogenated in a fixed-bed reactor using a hydrotreating catalyst, such as cobalt or nickel molybdate. Exxon found that use of this hydrogen donor solvent with carefully controlled properties improved process performance. Exxon developed a solvent index, based on solvent properties, which correlated with solvent effectiveness. [Pg.18]

Other processes have been developed in recent years, especially during the decades of the 1960s and 1970s, to produce liquid fuels from coal. Examples include the H-Coal, Mobil M, Solvent Refined Coal, and Exxon Donor Solvent processes. [Pg.276]

Ariga, S Baker, Q. A. "Evaluation of Exxon Donor Solvent (EDS) Coal Liquid as a Utility Diesel Fuel" ... [Pg.137]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.277 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.711 ]




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Donor solvent

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