Sodium bicarbonate production from nahcolite

a technology of nahcolite and sodium bicarbonate, which is applied in the direction of liquid-liquid reaction process, alkali metal carbonate, alkali metal sulfites/sulfates, etc., can solve the problems of too much fracture of oil shale formation, too much stress of the host rock, and inability to achieve the effect of reducing the compressive strength of the host rock

Inactive Publication Date: 2004-11-25
NIELSEN KURT R +2
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  • Abstract
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Benefits of technology

[0024] The present invention is described herein as it relates to the high temperature solution mining from discontinuous deposits of nahcolite contained in the nahcolitic oil shale of the Piceance Creek Basin of Colorado. This deposit contains lenses, nodules, and the like, as well as intermixed nominally horizontal beds of nearly pure nahcolite within the host shale. The quantity of nahcolite within the Piceance Creek deposit of nahcolitic oil shale normally varies between 18% and 40% with some variation on either side of these values. This includes beds of nearly 100% pure nahcolite which normally occur in horizontal layers and much leaner deposits of nahcolite embedded in the oil shale. These "lean nahcolitic oil shale deposits," for the most part, consist of lenses and nodules of nahcolite contained within the host oil shale rock, and include those nahcolitic deposits generally classified as embedded, nodules, crystal aggregates, and disseminated. The nahcolite content of this portion of the deposit is about 17 to 37%. A significant advantage of the present invention is that it is not limited to the recovery of bicarb from the beds of nearly pure nahcolite, but can be used to solution mine and recover these materials from the lean nahcolite deposits contained within oil shale.
[0025] Unlike prior art processes in which solution mining generally occurs laterally, i.e., horizontally, between one or more wells operating within a bed of pure nahcolite, solution mining via the present invention can be conducted vertically across a mining zone including one or more beds of pure nahcolite and / or layers of lean oil shale. In the preferred embodiment of the invention, high temperature, high pressure water (which may include recycled aqueous solution of bicarb and sodium carbonate) is injected in the top of the mining zone; the concentrated solution from the mining is recovered at a lower depth in the same well. Nahcolite is recovered from the beds of nahcolite and from the lean nahcolitic oil shale rock as the solution passes vertically downward and increases in concentration. As the mining continues, the mining area also expands laterally from the well.
[0026] While the foregoing describes a preferred mode of solution mining through a single well, the mining could also be conducted by adding the injection solution to a lower level and recovering the production solution at a higher geological elevation. Also, the addition of the injection solution and the recovery of the production solution can be alternated periodically to aid the mining process. Injection and production may also occur via different, but adjacent, wells if permitted by the formation or the stage of the solution mining in the geological formations involved.
[0027] This form of solution mining nahcolite is contrary to current thinking that discontinuities, i.e., areas of lean nahcolite concentration, in the deposit would inhibit the solution mining of the nahcolite. We have now found, however, that solution mining with water can be carried out efficiently if performed at the elevated temperatures and pressures of the present invention. There are several reasons for this: (a) the compressive strength of the host rock decreases with increasing temperatures; (b) the stress of the host rock increases with increasing temperatures; and (c) the solubility of nahcolite is far greater than originally expected at elevated temperatures.
[0028] As a result of factors (a) and (b) the introduction of high temperature water fractures the nahcolite containing oil shale. (See FIG. 4.) With rising temperatures, the strength of the host rock decreases and the stress increases--each to a point at which the two stresses become equal. At temperatures above this point, host rock breakdown (fracturing and spalling) is likely to occur. With the fracturing and spalling of the host rock, the solution mining water can reach additional soluble nahcolite nodules, lenses, and beds within the deposit.
[0029] The relationship of compressive strength and stress with temperature for one nahcolitic oil shale formation is shown in FIG. 4. At temperatures greater than about 175.degree. F., the stress on the shale becomes greater than the capability of the shale to withstand it and fracturing and spalling occur. When the shale fractures, the lenses and nodules of nahcolite within the shale can be more readily accessed by the solution mining water. Also, both the vertical and horizontal access to nahcolite in nominally horizontal beds within the shale is increased due to the fracturing. As illustrated in FIG. 4, as higher temperatures are used for solution mining, there is greater potential for shale fracture. The temperature at which the nahcolitic oil shale in the Piceance Creek Basin will start to fracture normally occurs between 175.degree. F. and 220.degree. F.

Problems solved by technology

Although U.S. Pat. No. 3,779,602 (assigned to Shell Oil Company) disclosed the possible use of low pressure steam at temperatures in excess of 250.degree. F. and preferably in excess of 300.degree. F., published test reports indicate that the process was not successful.
The Shell process, which was designed to recover oil as well as nahcolite, resulted in solids precipitation causing plugging and "flow impairment."
The steam caused too much fracture of the oil shale formation and had too little water content to adequately dissolve the nahcolite.
Moreover, the process was designed to decompose and recover hydrocarbons from the oil shale, impurities that would make it substantially more difficult and expensive to recover bicarb from the well production.
Indeed, up to this time no one had contemplated the economical solution mining of nahcolite at the temperatures and pressures described herein.
Such flashing could potentially cause the decomposition of sodium bicarbonate and / or precipitation of the dissolved salts.

Method used

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Examples

Experimental program
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example 1

[0083] This example illustrates the high temperature solution mining of nahcolite.

[0084] The techniques described herein are utilized effectively in the solution mining of nahcolite from the nahcolitic oil shale deposits in the Piceance Creek Basin of western Colorado. These deposits, for the most part, consist of lenses and nodules of nahcolite contained within an oil shale host rock. The nahcolite content of this portion of the deposit is 18% to 40%. There are also several, nominally-horizontal beds of varying thickness of nahcolite within the deposit.

[0085] A well is drilled into a nahcolitic oil shale, as shown in FIG. 3E, with the mining zone extending from 1647 feet below the ground surface (where injection solution is inserted into the formation) to 2202 feet (where the production solution is recovered), i.e., a vertical separation of 555 feet. The average nahcolite concentration over the mining zone is 22%, of which, 91.2% is contained in nodules within the oil shale and 8.8...

example 2

[0092] This example illustrates the recovery process shown in FIG. 2.

[0093] The process of the present invention, as described in FIG. 2, may be conducted under the following process parameters:

2 Temperature of production solution feed (2): 300.degree. F. Rate of production solution feed (2): 767 tph Sodium bicarbonate concentration in feed (2): 25% Number of stages: 5 Temperature of the last stage: 100.degree. F.

[0094] This example assumes a feed rate of approximately 767 tons per hour with a sodium bicarbonate content of 25% and utilizes five stages of equipment of a size believed to be commercially available.

[0095] The material balance of the system is:

3 Feed Crystals Discharge Rate Temp. Produced Rate Stage (tph) (.degree. F.) (tph) (tph) 1 767 240 14.0 767 2 767 205 28.4 767 3 767 170 25.0 767 4 767 135 22.6 767 5 767 100 20.3 767 To Dewater 767 100 110.3 --Wet Product 119 100 -- --(78) Dewater Sol'n 648 100 -- --(79) Make-up Water 8.7 -- -- --(add to stream 26)

[0096] If, howev...

example 3

[0099] As another example using multiple stages of crystallization as illustrated in FIG. 2, and by using a saturated feed at a temperature of 350.degree. F., approximately sixty percent more sodium can be produced using approximately fifty-seven percent of the feed volume utilized in Example 2. With feed temperatures greater than 350.degree. F., even greater production per unit volume of feed can be attained.

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Abstract

A method for producing sodium bicarbonate from a nahcolite deposit comprising injecting water or other aqueous solution at a temperature of at least 250° F. into the deposit, dissolving sodium bicarbonate in the hot water to form a production solution and subjecting the production solution to multiple stages of crystallization. The sodium bicarbonate crystals may be dewatered and dried to form a commercial sodium bicarbonate product.

Description

[0001] This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09 / 540,658, filed on Mar. 31, 2000 (now U.S. Pat. No. 6,699,447), which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09 / 480,092 filed Jan. 10, 2000, which claims the benefit of provisional patent application No. 60 / 115,184 filed Jan. 8, 1999. The parent patent application Ser. No. 09 / 540,658 also claimed the benefit of provisional patent application No. 60 / 127,795 filed Mar. 31, 1999.I. FIELD OF THE INVENTION[0002] The invention relates to the solution mining of nahcolite, an ore consisting primarily of sodium bicarbonate, to produce sodium bicarbonate ("bicarb").II. BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION[0003] There have been a number of prior art processes attempting to recover bicarb from nahcolite deposits. We have now found that the process of producing this compound by solution mining of nahcolite deposits at high temperatures is more economical and has a number of other advantages. In particul...

Claims

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Application Information

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Patent Type & Authority Applications(United States)
IPC IPC(8): C01D7/12C01D7/35
CPCC01D7/126C01D7/35
Inventor NIELSEN, KURT R.CIROTSKI, LEO G.TURNER, ALLAN L.
Owner NIELSEN KURT R
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