As manufacturer specialized in manufacturing of Antimony trioxide and Non-Halogen Flame Retardant,Since 2000, JIEFU have pioneered the manufacturing of flame retardant masterbatches in China.JIEFU initiated from custom flame retardant compounding of all commodity and engineering plastics to technologically sound production of fiame retardant masterbatches under the brand name JIEFU masterbatches.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

China cuts Antimony, Tin export quota for 2008

China has cut the 2008 export quotas for tin, tungsten and antimony, Bloomberg News reports, as the world's fastest growing major economy seeks to reduce its trade surplus and meet local demand for raw materials.

The country will allow exports of 33,300 tonnes of tin next year, the Ministry of Commerce said in a statement on its website today, down from 37,000 tonnes in 2007. The quotas reinforce a series of tax changes which have made exports less attractive recently.

China's actual tin exports in the first nine months of 2007 have amounted to 20,570 tonnes, more than the total shipped in the whole of 2006. However in recent months export volumes have fallen and imports have surged in response to stronger local demand. In September China exported 1,525 tonnes but imported 3,911 tonnes of refined metal, mainly from LME warehouses.

Sam Xu
MSN: xubiao_1996@hotmail.com

...
Read more...

Tin prices rise

Barring a price rise in tin, prices of other metals ruled flat in the non-ferrous metal market on Tuesday. Marketmen said increased industrial demand and report of rise in its prices at the London Metal Exchange (LME) mainly pushed up tin pri ces. In London Metal Exchange, tin gained 350 dollar at 16,800 a metric ton. Tin ingot remained in demand on the back of rising trend at London Metal Exchange and rose by Rs 5 at Rs 805 a kilo.

Following were today's quotations per kilo: Tin ingot 805, zinc slab 175.00 zinc dross 135, nickel plate (4x4) 1450-1600, (9x9) 1475-1595, (4x24) 1475-1605, cadmium plate 420, Rod 410, antimony (china) 310, gun metal scrap 260, bell metal scrap 260, cop per wire scrap 360, copper super d rod 380, copper wire bar 380, copper mixed scrap 340, C.C rod 345, Utensil scrap 315, Mixed scrap 310, Chadripital 255, brass sheet cutting 240, bullet scrap 255, bharat scrap 235, accessories scrap 230, brass boring 23 0-250, brass radiator scrap 220 and huny scrap 250. Lead ingot 125, Lead imported 155-165, Aluminium ingots 135, sheet cutting 130, aluminium wire scrap 125 and Aluminium utensils scrap 122. – Press Trust of India

...
Read more...

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Chinese Markets for Phenol

This report about the Chinese phenol markets examines China' s macroeconomic trends, investment environment, phenol industry structure and capacities, production and demand, end-user market consumption trends, distribution channels and industry participants. Long-term forecasts for major phenol production and demand are included. The report contains over 40 tables and charts. Key producers of phenol are profiled. More than 30 Chinese phenol producers are listed in the producer directory section.

Most primary and secondary research was done in China in order to access up-to-date government regulations, market information and industry data. Data are collected from the Chinese government publications, Chinese chemical industry associations, local governments' chemical industry bureaus, and the Internet. Interviews are conducted with Chinese industry experts, and phenol producers in China.

Historical data includes the data for the year of 1996, 2001 and 2006. Long-term development trends are projected to the years 2011 and 2016. Economic models and quantitative methods are applied in this report to project market demand and industry trends. Metric system is used and values are presented in either Yuan (RMB, current price) and/or US dollars. Exchange rate for 2006 is based on the annual average rate. The word "demand" is used interchangeably with "consumption". Totals may not add due to rounding.

Executive Summary

China has experienced over two decades of high economic growth, which has been stimulated by the consecutive increases of industrial output, consumer consumption and capital investment. China' s GDP has been growing at 11% per annum. National industry output has been advancing at 10.3% annually and will continue to sustain a strong growth into the next decade. The fast-growing middle class is creating an enormous consumer society. As the fastest-growing economy in the world, the emerging market has attracted the attention of investors and corporations around the world for the last two decades.

To deepen the reform of state-owned enterprises is a long-term task and needs great efforts. The reform of state-owned economy has witnessed rapid changes in both economic and social aspects. The introduction of foreign advanced technology and capitals will continue to be favored by the Chinese government and business community. New ways will be adopted to utilize foreign investment, including mergers, acquisition, and investment funds and securities investment. China will continue to improve its investment environment in the areas of legal system, intellectual property protection, foreign trade and investment regulation, infrastructure and financial system. China is the second largest foreign investment recipient after the United States in the world today. Given its vast market, the country provides tremendous opportunities for investment and trade both for the present and future.

...
Read more...

Chinese Markets for Automotive Plastics

This report examines China' s macroeconomic trends, investment environment, automotive plastics industry structure and capacity, production and demand, enduse market consumption trends, distribution channels and principal industry participants. Long-term forecast for major automotive coating production and demand are included. Key producers are profiled. Top Chinese automotive plastics producers are listed in the producer directory section.

Most primary and secondary research was done in China in order to access up-to-date government regulations, market information and industry data. Data was collected from the Chinese government publications, Chinese language newspapers and magazines, Chinese chemical industry associations including Chinese automotive plastics industry associations, local governments' chemical industry bureaus, automotive plastics industry publications, and our in-house databases. Interviews were conducted with Chinese industry experts, university professors, and automotive plastics producers in China.

Historical data include 1996, 2001 and 2006. Longterm development trends are projected to the years 2011 and 2016. Economic models and quantitative methods are applied in this report to project market demand and industry trends. Metric system is used and values are presented in either Yuan (RMB, current price) and/or US dollars. Exchange rate for 2006 is based on the annual average rate (7.9 Yuan per US dollar). The word "demand" is used interchangeably with "consumption". Totals may not add due to rounding.

Executive Summary

China has experienced over two decades of high economic growth, which has been stimulated by the consecutive increases of industrial output, consumer consumption and capital investment. China' s GDP has been growing at 11% per annum. National industry output has been advancing at 10.3% annually and will continue to sustain a strong growth into the next decade. The fast-growing middle class is creating an enormous consumer society. As the fastest-growing economy in the world, the emerging market has attracted the attention of investors and corporations around the world for the last two decades.

To deepen the reform of state-owned enterprises is a long-term task and needs great efforts. The reform of state-owned economy has witnessed rapid changes in both economic and social aspects. The introduction of foreign advanced technology and capitals will continue to be favored by the Chinese government and business community. New ways will be adopted to utilize foreign investment, including mergers, acquisition, and investment funds and securities investment. China will continue to improve its investment environment in the areas of legal system, intellectual property protection, foreign trade and investment regulation, infrastructure and financial system. China is the second largest foreign investment recipient after the United States in the world today. Given its vast market, the country provides tremendous opportunities for investment and trade both for the present and future.

...
Read more...

Flame retardant COATED FABRICS to 2010

US demand to reach 680 million square yards by 2010

Demand for coated fabrics is projected to increase 3.2 percent annually through 2010 to 680 million square yards. Gains will be driven in part by ongoing strength in the protective clothing and motor vehicle airbag markets. Rebounds in spending on capital projects and nonresidential building construction will also aid growth. Ongoing advances in coated fabric technology, including the use of thinner and more durable coatings, will also spur gains. However, further increases will be restrained by burgeoning competition from engineered textiles, which feature chemical treatments or coatings that are applied at the thread or fiber level rather than after the fabric has been produced.

Vinyl-coated fabrics to remain leading type

Of the three major fabric types, nonrubber- coated fabrics, including those coated with polyvinyl chloride (PVC), polyurethane or acrylic, accounted for the largest share of coated fabric sales in 2005, with more than 80 percent of demand value. Within this category, PVC-coated fabrics are the leading type, benefitting from good performance at a modest price in a wide variety of applications. Rubbercoated fabrics, including those coated with natural rubber, neoprene, silicone rubber or butyl rubber, will post above average gains through 2009, benefitting from the growth in motor vehicle airbags, industrial equipment and protective clothing. Fabric-backed wallcoverings are expected to post the strongest gains over the same period, due to product innovations and the rebound in nonresidential construction spending.

...
Read more...

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Editorial: Chemistry's big question

Someone once asked me if chemistry's disproportionately low profile in public life was due to its lack of obvious 'big questions' to answer. Physics has the birth of the universe to figure out; biology has the secrets of life to unravel. Well, let's be clear about our big question - how do we keep the lights on without destroying the world? 

The way that we currently produce our energy - for light, heat and transportation - is clearly unsustainable, largely because of our reliance on greenhouse gas-emitting fuels. The most realistic solutions all rely on chemistry. And if the consensus of opinion amongst climate scientists is correct, we need low-carbon technologies immediately. Yet sometimes the range of options can seem bewildering. Should chemists pour their efforts into capturing the free energy that streams from the Sun? Or building better batteries to store that energy? Perhaps hydrogen or methanol would make better energy carriers? 

The need for quick answers, and a pragmatic view about the nature of business and politics, enables us to narrow our choices. The hydrogen economy probably won't help much: storing the gas is proving tricky, its distribution infrastructure would turn a trillion-dollar industry upside-down, and we still lack a commercially viable means of producing hydrogen without creating more CO2 in the process.  

Fusion power is often held up as a great hope, but despite the progress of the £6.5 billion ITER experimental reactor project, a working fusion power station is at least decades away.Why capture the Sun in a magnetic bottle here on Earth when you can keep the unruly plasma at a convenient distance of, say, 150 million kilometres? Solar photovoltaics should be the obvious solution to our energy needs, but high costs have stopped them from penetrating the market. Only substantially cheaper photovoltaic materials - developed by chemists - will swing solar power into the mainstream. 

Nuclear power offers the most realistic short-term alternative to fossil fuels - but as governments around the globe have found, it is essential to secure the approval of the voting public by offering clear evidence of safety. Yet in a report released on 21 September, the Royal Society warned that the UK's 100 tonne plutonium stockpile poses severe risks from accidents or security breaches. Ideally, we should convert the plutonium into mixed oxide fuel for use in a new generation of power stations. It's a goal which relies on chemistry - yet there is still no clear political strategy to address the issue.  

On the same day, the UK government announced that a new Energy Technologies Institute, backed by £550 million of government investment over 10 years, would be based in Loughborough and involve energy giants such as BP, Shell and E.ON. It's a step in the right direction, but little of this science will make any difference without legislative support. Breaking the fossil fuel habit needs more than technological innovation - it needs an economic revolution, and it's simply not going to happen overnight.  

That's why technologies such as carbon capture and storage (CCS) are so important. CCS is a fundamentally chemical problem - how do you deliver a relatively pure gas stream from a messy mixture? Solving this would mitigate fossil fuel burning and give longer-term technologies time to come to fruition. Chemistry really can save the world - but scientists must be canny about selecting the most commercially realistic ways of achieving that.

...
Read more...

U.S. antimony trioxide market

As U.S. Dollar has been weakening in the passed several months, American market participants are complaining that imports has become more expensive than before, and antimony trioxide price is up from USD2.4/lb ex-warehouse to currently USD2.5/lb, but as price is going up, antimony demand has not been affected.

A west coast trader told Asian Metal that price of antimony trioxide is increasing along with the antimony ingot price. For the Chinese 99.5%min antimony trioxide, offers have been raised from USD2.40-2.43/lb to currently around USD2.5/lb ex-warehouse. Twinkling Star antimony trioxide is USD0.03-0.05/lb more expensive.

According to him, the demands of antimony trioxide from his customers have not dropped because of higher prices and most of the material was bought for producing flame retardant. "European consumers may be more sensitive about prices, but American manufactures are more focused in keeping their normal production to catch up the downstream demand," remarked the trader.

Another trader also claimed that the demand is keeping stable in the U.S. market but there are fewer traders in the States who deal with antimony or antimony trioxide. He claimed that major consumers have changed the purchasing strategy as they are now buying from fewer suppliers.

"One of the major buyers used to source material from more than five suppliers including producers and traders, so they were able to buy at cheaper prices. However, they only buy from one or two suppliers now at higher prices, and the suppliers could deliver the raw material as contracted," the source revealed to Asian Metal.

He confirmed the price has gone up to USD2.5/lb ex-warehouse in the American market and he thinks price will remain at the current level for the coming months.

...
Read more...

Zinc market summary Oct 2007

Spot zinc ingot price keeps downward movement in Chinese market this week, and consumers still purchase with a small quantity for fear that the price would continue to drop in the short term. Concluded deals are thin in Chinese spot zinc market.

3-month zinc on LME market trend is unclear. The price drops from USD2,955/t last Friday to USD2,880/t this Monday, though zinc inventory reduces by 200t. In the rest of this week, the price fluctuates slightly and reaches USD2,865/t this Thursday, down by USD15/t compared with that early this week.

Different from 3-month zinc on LME, Chinese spot zinc ingot price drops greatly. The price declines by RMB300/t (USD40/t) to around RMB25,850-25,950/t (USD3,451-3,465/t) this Monday, down further to RMB25,450-25,550/t (USD3,398-3,411/t) on Tuesday. In the rest of this week, the price fluctuates slightly and stabilizes at RMB25,300-25,400/t (USD3,378-3,391/t).

Market sources pointed that Chinese zinc market remains soft, resulted from large stocks in domestic market and the increase of imported zinc ingot supply. Meanwhile, zinc consumers are reluctant to rebuild large stocks under falling prices. In view of the weak fundamentals of zinc market, participants hold pessimistic attitudes towards the future market.

In line with zinc ingot market, zinc concentrate price falls greatly. Miners revealed that it is difficult to conclude deals this week, since many major smelters begin to import the materials with low prices. The mainstream price of zinc concentrate 50%min is at around RMB16,200-16,700/t (USD2,163-2,230/t) delivered to buyers.

Compared with above markets, zinc oxide market keeps relatively stable. Zinc oxide 99.7%min price is at around RMB25,000/t (USD3,338/t), on a par with that two weeks ago.

...
Read more...

Antimony market summary Oct

Antimony market witnesses a week of calmness with few activities taking place both domestically and overseas. As the market demand shows no signs of recovering, many participants predict that the market will continue to stand still in the near term.

A few deals were concluded at around RMB40,000-40,200/t (USD5,355-5,382/t) ex works for standard grade-two antimony ingot during the week, and some major smelters, qualified suppliers for antimony products, claimed deals of RMB40,300-40,500/t (USD5,395-5,422/t) ex works for materials with superior quality and famous brand name. Meanwhile, some smelters who hold positive attitudes towards the future market refuse to sell any below RMB40,000/t (USD5,355/t) ex works. However, some antimony trioxide producers disclosed that they could obtain materials at around RMB39,800/t (USD5,328/t) ex works from long-term suppliers in Hunan.

The export market for antimony ingot keeps quiet with many market participants complaining about the lack of deals. Few foreign buyers are showing interest in buying from Chinese state-owned exporters due to their high offer of USD5,700-5,800/t FOB. Although some traders received one or two inquiries during the week, they reported no response after they made offers to buyers. Many participants attribute the severe smuggling to the dull export market for antimony products, revealing that European buyers can easily obtain antimony ingot at USD5,550-5,600/t CIF Rotterdam for materials with undisclosed origin.

The European market for antimony ingot also keeps slack. Only some small deals of few tonnages were reportedly concluded at around USD5,600-5,650/t in warehouse Rotterdam for standard grade-two material and around USD50/t higher for grade-one material..

The antimony trioxide market also has not changed much during the past few weeks. Domestic prices are still around RMB36,300-36,800/t (USD4,859-4,926/t) ex works, and export prices stand at USD4,800-4,850/t FOB. Meanwhile, products with famous brand are offered at a higher price of USD4,900/t FOB or USD5,000/t CIF Rotterdam. However, limited deals were heard of in both domestic and export markets during the week.

...
Read more...

Thursday, October 25, 2007

China Antimony market news

Commenting on the stockpile in Rotterdam warehouse, he holds that most of the material shipped to Rotterdam before the summer holiday was already consumed. When he analyzed the market in the future, he was of the view antimony trioxide price would be stable as antimony ingot sells at high price level and the consumers are reluctant to accept higher prices.

...
Read more...

Antimony ingot market stable with few deals concluded

Antimony ingot market keeps stable with the prevailing price of RMB40,000-40,300/t ex works. Although not many transactions are concluded, the price does not change much.

A consumer from Guangdong told Asian Metal that they just purchased 120t of antimony ingot at RMB39,800/t (USD5,300/t) ex works from a long-term supplier in Hunan, but acknowledged the prevealing price is around RMB40,000-40,200/t (USD5,326-5,353/t) ex works. The source revealed that the offer for grade one antimony ingot is around RMB40,500/t (USD5,393) ex works, but most deals were closed at RMB40,200-40,300/t (USD5,353-5,366/t) ex works. "The market keeps comparatively stable, though transactions are not many," said the source.

Referring to the international market, the source forecasted that the export market might move up slightly in the near term with the coming of Christmas Day, thinking the consumers may purchase some materials for stock. However, it still needs time to see the market direction.

Zhazixi Antimony Mine of Hunan Anhua concluded a deal of 20t at RMB40,300/t ex works. According to the source, if the quantity reaches 60t, the concluded price will be 40,300/t (USD5,366/t) delivered to Guangdong. The source revealed that the mainstream price is ranging RMB40,000-40,200/t (USD5,326-5,353/t) ex works.

65 attendees present at a meeting yesterday, resolved that Metallurgical Construction Corporation (MCC) would take over the smelter, which will be submitted to the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission for approval. The smelter will expand its capacity if the above resolution is approved.

Participants think the antimony ingot market will keep stable, and if transactions increase, the price may go up slightly in the future.

...
Read more...

China's Iron, Copper Ore Imports up

China imported 250 million tons of iron ore fines in the first eight months of 2007, a growth of 14.5 percent year on year, according to latest statistics released by the General Administration of Customs.

The arrivals were valued at 19.61 billion U.S. dollars, up 43.8 percent.

Customs sources said the import price of iron ore fines from January to August averaged 78.2 U.S. dollars per ton, up 25.5 percent compared with the same period of last year. The price soared to 89.8 U.S. dollars per ton in August, up 36.9 percent year on year.

Experts held that the hike of iron ore fines price was mainly triggered by the rocketing freight cost, which by the end of this June had more than doubled the year-earlier level. The mounting cost was due largely to the shortage of international shipping capabilities.

In a related development, the nation's imports of copper ore fines in the first eight months this year went up 35.9 percent year-on-year to 3.192 million tons, which were valued at 6.01 billion U.S. dollars, up 63.2 percent.

The average price of the arrivals in the Jan.-Aug. period rocketed to 1,882 U.S. dollars per ton, up 20.1 percent year on year.

The nation has scarce copper ore resources and mainly imports copper ore from Chile, Peru, Mongolia and Australia to fill up the gap between supply and demand.

According to the latest report of International Copper Study Group, world supply fell short of demand by 130,000 tons in the first half of this year after seasonal adjustment. The short supply gives strong support to the copper price hike.

With the brisk domestic demand for copper, industrial insiders predict that the nation's copper price will continue going up in the fourth quarter of this year.

...
Read more...

Housing Prices Jump on Rising Demands, Costs

Rising demand and costs are driving up average housing prices across China, National Bureau of Statistics spokesman Li Xiaochao told a news conference on Thursday.

Average housing prices in 70 major cities jumped 8.2 percent in the third quarter of this year, compared with 6.3 percent in the second quarter and 5.6 percent in the first quarter.

Over the first three quarters, housing prices grew 6.7 percent, led by the city of Shenzhen in southern China's Guangdong Province, Li said.

Prices in Shenzhen jumped 15.7 percent in the period from a year earlier, followed by Beihai (12.1 percent) and Beijing (10.1 percent), Li said.

Prices for new residences grew 7.2 percent in the nine months and prices for second-hand homes rose 6.6 percent.

Li didn't provide any figures for Shanghai.

The rapid growth of China's economy and average incomes spurred the demand for houses, along with speculators buying multiple homes, Li said.

"The inadequate supply also helps stimulate housing prices, especially the supply of lower priced homes," Li said.

The rising cost of land acquisition and higher prices of construction materials contributed to the growth of housing price, Li said.

In the first three quarters, the trading price for land rose 12.8 percent on average in the 70 major cities, with 15-percent growth in the third quarter, Li said.

...
Read more...

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Titanium supply expands

Allegheny technologies is expanding titanium sponge capacity to meet continued strong demand from the aerospace and power generation markets.

CEO L. Patrick Hassey says the Pittsburgh firm's facility in Albany, Ore., should have 22 million pounds of annual capacity in place by the first half of 2008.

The plant now makes 16 million lb/year.

"We also remain on schedule to begin producing premium-grade titanium sponge at our Raleigh, Utah, facility," he says. – Purchasing

...
Read more...

DuPont raises titanium prices

DuPont said Friday its Titanium Technologies unit will raise prices in the Middle East and Africa for Ti-Pure titanium dioxide grades in a move to counter higher raw material, energy and fuel costs.

Effective Oct. 1, titanium dioxide grades will increase $150 per ton, the company said.

The announcement comes a day after DuPont raised titanium prices in Asia.

Titanium dioxide is used by the coatings, paper and plastics industries.

DuPont shares rose 44 cents to $48.33 in morning trading. – Associated Press

...
Read more...

Titanium supply will be tight through 2010

Capacity expansions won't help supply until next decade

Buyers are correct in worrying about supply of titanium and titanium alloys through 2010. That's the admission from Dawne Hickton, vice president and CEO of titanium producer RTI International Metals in Niles, Ohio, even though producers are dusting off expansion blueprints for titanium sponge and mill product capacity.

Buyers will have to blend long-term acquisition plans with risk management programs because "supply still will be the issue for some time to some," she says, since major jetliner makers already have a six-year backlog for new aircraft designs that call for three to four times as much titanium as older models.

Various buyer surveys by Purchasing have found concern about future availability of titanium – from sponge, the raw material, to final fabricated parts, which already take as long as 18 months for delivery these days. "Mill product tightness will continue through 2010," Hickton tells the Basic Industries Group's Aerospace Materials Cost Outlook and Forecast 2007 meeting in Philadelphia this week. "Final finished product tightness will continue as well."

Reason: One key factor is the time it takes to get new capacity on line. Hickton says 30-36 months are needed before a new sponge plant goes in operation and even longer for downstream capacity of mill products and finished fabricated parts – since production has to be certified to meet aerospace and medical industry quality requirements.

John Mothersole, an economist with Global Insight in Eddystone, Pa., tells the conference that global sponge capacity will increase by 14% annually between 2006 and 2010 to 220,000 metric tons – based on expansions announced by RTI, Allegheny Technologies of Pittsburgh, Russian producer VSMPO-AVISMA, Kobe Steel of Japan and several Chinese firms. However, some of the Chinese expansions now are in doubt – yet world demand will surge by as much as 40% in the same timeframe, keeping pressure on supply and prices.

And there's also a chance that aerospace demand for high-grade titanium and titanium alloy mill products could grow by as much as 22% annually next decade – if and when the Boeing 787 and Airbus A350 and A380 programs really take off. These future-model planes will switch from traditional aluminium-lithium skins to composite materials to reduce weight and cut maintenance costs. These planes will require 20% of their weight to be titanium, as compared with 5% in previous generations. That means that the Boeing 787 Dreamliner will have 250,000 lb of titanium per plane while the A380 will have 200,000. – Purchasing

...
Read more...

Panzhihua commences on RMB 490 mln titanium sponge plant

Panzhihua Steel & Iron Group (Pzhsteel), one of the nation's largest steel and iron manufacturers, has commenced on its RMB 490 million titanium sponge project in Panzhihua Vanadium and Titanium Industrial Park last Friday, according to Shanghai Securities News.

Located in Western China's Sichuan province, the new plant is capable of producing 5,000 ton of titanium sponges. The construction period will span eighteen months and the new plant is expected to start its operations by the end of 2008. The new plant is expected to bring an annual sales revenue of RMB 700 million.

Pzhsteel will be integrating state-of-art technologies to the titanium sponge plant, which will form a titanium production chain, with the addition of a titanium slag plant and chloro-alkaline plant built by the company. The project is one of the greatest progress in titanium production, said Yu Zisu, general manager of Pzhsteel.

Pzhsteel started its operations in 1970 and became China's largest vanadium steel and railway steel producer. The group consists of three listed companies, including Panzhihua New Steel & Vanadium Co. Ltd, Pangang Changcheng Special Steel Co. Ltd, and Chongqing Titanium Industry Co. Ltd of Pangang Group. – China Knowledge

...
Read more...

S Africa: Plans for titanium plant

As part of the government's commitment to speed up economic growth, the Department of Science and Technology is looking into the possibility of developing an industry that will enable this country to produce titanium powder from ore mined in the Eastern Cape, and eventually to cast titanium parts for the aerospace industry.

Director General of the department Phil Mjarwa revealed at a press conference held on Wednesday in Parliament that the department was already in talks with the Boeing aircraft manufacturing company about the possibility of providing them with titanium powder.

He also disclosed that the government was looking into the possibility of acquiring a R400-million plant to produce it.

State-owned foundries have already begun producing samples of titanium aerospace parts.

Aerospace parts would take longer

Mjarwa explained that the powder could be produced commercially here within two to four years. The aerospace parts would take longer — probably until 2014 — because of the need to have the parts certified.

The powder, a precursor to the actual titanium metal, is produced from ilmenite mined in the Eastern Cape, through a "Kroll process". Its most common compound, titanium dioxide, is used in the manufacture of white pigments. Other compounds include titanium tetrachloride (used in smoke screens and skywriting, and as a catalyst) and titanium trichloride (used as a catalyst in the production of polypropylene).

The two most useful properties of the metal form are corrosion resistance, and the highest strength-to-weight ratio of any metal. In its unalloyed condition, titanium is as strong as steel, but 45 percent lighter.

...
Read more...

World largest titanium mine put into production in Mozambique

A titanium ore dredge mine, Mozambique's largest mining project to date, is under way at Topuito on the coast of the Northern Province Nampula, local media reported on Saturday.

Mozambican President Armando Guebuza on Friday inaugurated the mine at Topuito of the Northern Province Nampula, which can supply 6 percent of the total world demand for titanium feedstock, AIM said.

The mine has been developed by the Irish company Kenmare Resources, which has invested 500 million U.S. dollars since prospection into the heavy mineral deposits began in 1987. The mine is set to become one of the world's largest suppliers of titanium ores.

Titanium metal is light, strong and chemically inert. It is used in the aerospace and automobile industries. But the main use of the titanium ores is for the production of pigment by chemical companies. Everyday items such as paints, paper and plastic depend on titanium for their colouring.

From the heavy mineral sands of Topuito, Kenmare plans to produce 800,000 tons of ilmenite (iron titanium oxide) and 21,000 tons of rutile (titanium dioxide) a year. The mine should also produce 56,000 tons a year of a third ore, zircon (zirconium silicate), which is used in ceramics.

At the inauguration of the mine on Friday, the Kenmare managing director Michael Cargill recalled that "at times it seemed impossible to continue". The negotiations were "long and tough," he admitted, "but I believe we ended up as good friends as well as negotiating partners."

Exports have not yet begun, since the barge, built in Singapore, has not reached Topuito. Cargill told reporters that the barge left the Sri Lankan capital of Colombo, about a month ago, and is expected to reach Mozambique on about Nov. 8.

The first confirmed export is 25,000 tons of ilmenite for a company in Slovenia. But Cargill says that major chemical companies elsewhere in Europe, in America, Japan and China, are all interested in obtaining titanium ores from Topuito.

Since 1987, Kenmare has spent about 500 million dollars on heavy sands prospection, and on building the Topuito infrastructures. Of this, 275 million dollars is in the form of bank loans and the rest is equity.

Cargill was confident of paying off the loans on schedule, and believes that the mine would make a return on the investment "in maybe ten years."

The mine and its associated structures provide about 400 jobs. Kenmare wants to recruit the unskilled and semi-skilled labor locally, although expatriate technical staff will still be required for many years to come, since this is the first time such a mine has been built in Mozambique.

...
Read more...

China Direct fired up by magnesium deal

Even as its chairman prepares to ring the opening bell on Wall Street on Tuesday, investment company China Direct has seen its shares surge 128% in the ten days since it made its debut on the American Stock Exchange through a backdoor listing. The latest stimulus to the company's fortunes, which drove up the stock by more than 35% Friday, was merely a small magnesium project with estimated annual sales of $50 million.

China Direct seems to have swung a good deal, at least on paper. Just four days after it had made its initial investment of some $2 million in CDI Pan Magnesium, China Direct's market value had shot up by $50.6 million to $193.5 million. The stock leapt 35.43%, or $3.10, to $11.85, with more than 7.3 million shares changing hands.

CDI Pan Magnesium is a joint venture 51% held by China Direct; its Chinese partner, Shanxi Jinyang Coal and Coke Group, owns the remaining 49% stake in the project. China Direct said last Monday it would contribute 51 million yuan ($6.8 million) as registered capital, which will be infused in stages over the course of 2 years. The first installment of $2.035 million was provided by China Direct on October 1.

The joint venture currently has a production capacity of about 6,000 tons of magnesium per year and is completing the construction of two new facilities that will add another 12,000 tons annually in 2008.

Based on the current magnesium price of approximately $2,800 per ton, China Direct predicted that the new production capacity, when fully operational, will be able to generate approximately $50 million in annualized sales, with an anticipated net profit margin of 15% to 20% for the fiscal year 2008.

Dr. James Wang, CEO of China Direct, commented, "We are committed to our current plan of reaching manufacturing capacity of 40,000 to 50,000 tons of pure magnesium while distributing an additional 40,000 to 50,000 tons of magnesium in 2008. Our management team expects global demand for magnesium to increase substantially for the foreseeable future and we will continue to grow our magnesium operations to be a leading worldwide force in this industry."

Operated as an investment and consultancy firm, China Direct has interest in several zinc and magnesium projects in China and has helped a few small-sized Chinese firms to tap the U.S. capital markets. In August 2006, China Direct arranged to be acquired by Evolve One, a money-losing over-the-counter-listed company that developed Internet and direct retail marketing companies, in an all-stock deal. Upon completion of the deal, Evolve One changed its name to China Direct and moved up from the OTC Bulletin Board to the Amex on September 24 this year, after which its share price doubled in just ten days.

China Direct said its turnover skyrocketed 223 times to $40,452,970 in the second quarter ended June from $180,417 in the comparable quarter the previous year. The increase in revenues was primarily attributable to Chang Magnesium, Lang Chemical and CDI Wanda, the three Chinese entities acquired after October 2006.

Net income for the second quarter also increased, to $2,267,742, or $0.16 per share, compared with a net loss of $362,697, or $0.04 per share, for the second quarter of 2006. – Forbes

...
Read more...

LME considers new metals contracts

The London Metal Exchange, the world's largest metals bourse, may introduce new contracts for a variety of steel products and is also considering metals like magnesium and cobalt.

The LME announced plans last month to start handling steel contracts via electronic and telephone trading, starting Feb. 25. Trading on the LME dealing floor will begin April 28. The contracts are for steel billet, a semi-finished product made from scrap. One will be deliverable in Turkey and the other in South Korea.

"One steel contract for the entire steel industry is akin to saying the one base-metals contract can meet the needs of all those in the aluminium, copper, nickel, lead, zinc and tin industries," the LME chief executive, Martin Abbott, said at a seminar to mark the beginning of LME Week in London on Monday. "Our steel billet contracts are therefore a start of what could be several LME steel contracts."

The 130-year-old bourse is competing with rivals including the New York Mercantile Exchange to expand its share of commodities trading after metals and energy prices climbed to record levels last year. The LME handled commodities trades valued at $8.1 trillion in 2006, 80 percent higher than a year earlier.

The LME has received a study on magnesium trading and will begin to assess it Tuesday, Abbott said.

...
Read more...

US-listed China Direct raises 2007 guidance on magnesium, chemical ops

Florida-based China Direct Inc said it is raising its 2007 forecasts on strong magnesium prices, and strong performances from its consulting and chemical operations.

Management now sees 2007 revenue exceeding 175 mln usd with net profit of over 9.5 mln, compared to previous guidance of 150 mln and 8.25 mln, respectively.

"The third quarter and remainder of 2007 have been positively impacted by the overall prices for pure magnesium in the global marketplace as well as strong performances from the consulting division and chemical operations," China Direct said in a statement.

...
Read more...

Magnesium offering prices up in India but domestic price keeps stable

Magnesium price in Indian domestic market remains stable at around INR130-135/kg, while CIF price went up to around USD3,050-3,100/t CIF Mumbai port, from USD2,950-3,000/kg sold last week and sources believe the price will continue to go up.

According to participants, most deals this week were concluded at the higher side of the price level of around USD3,100/t CIF Mumbai port and the stable price of around INR130-135/kg in the local market was attributed to the fact that some traders still have old stocks.

A source who concluded a deal of USD3, 070/t CIF Mumbai port, up from USD3, 050/t CIF Mumbai port sold last week, agreed that price will continue to go up as tight supply will continue to drive the price to the sky.

"I think Chinese suppliers are trying to achieve around USD3,500/t CIF Mumbai port by the end of the year but I do not think they will reach that level because consumers are fed up of week-on-week price increase," said the source. "I do not foresee much price increase before end of the year.

Another source reported a deal at USD3,100/t CIF Mumbai port, USD70 higher than his last deal, believing that price will not go down in a short time because material is still in short supply and Chinese suppliers are not eager to sell at this moment which will continue to help to push the price higher.

...
Read more...

Chinese bismuth participants watch the market

Facing the dropping price in bismuth market, many Chinese participants are cautious to take much new action, planning to watch the market.

"We quote USD13/lb for bismuth 99.99%min these two weeks, but customers do not have any interest to purchase, nor do they send the counter bid," said a trader, whose last conclusion was traced back to late September, when an Indian consumer bought five tons of bismuth 99.99%min at USD13/lb.

The source usually deals with about 100 tons of bismuth per month, but it does not contract any deal so far this month. "Receiving few inquires from consumers, we are almost out of the bismuth business this month," added the source, believing it can not see any sign of rebound, but remain stable in the near future.

"Smelters quoted RMB190,000/t for bismuth 99.99%min last week, and we purchased five tons at the price of RMB187,000/t, " stated a manufacturer of bismuth oxide, emphasizing that they do not want to purchase in large volume due to volatile bismuth price.

With the only purchase mentioned above in October, the consumer expressed its worry about the price decrease. If the consumer buys large volumes of the material, it will lose money in case the price of bismuth metal drops when selling bismuth oxide, elaborated the source.

Under the pressure of turnover, smelters may have to undersell their stockpile if demand remains low, forecasted the consumer.

Participants hold that the bismuth market may remain stable in the coming weeks, or slide after a period of stability if demand continues to be low.

...
Read more...

Zinc oxide market stable

Although spot zinc ingot price decreases continuously and reached to the low level of RMB25,400-25,500/t (USD3,382-3,395/t) this Tuesday, zinc oxide market keeps relatively stable.

A source from a Jiangsu-based producer with a monthly output of 100tpm offered its zinc oxide 99.7%min at around RMB25,000 (RMB3,329/t) ex works. "Spot zinc ingot price has slid by about RMB1,000/t (USD133/t) in recent two weeks, but zinc oxide price remains at the level of around RMB25,000/t (RMB3,329/t) ex works, the same level as that the previous two weeks," said the source.

"As our plant is carrying out long-term contracts, we could not adjust zinc oxide price in such a short time. In addition, the direction of zinc ingot market is still unclear, so we prefer to keep watching the market," said the source.

The source believes that spot zinc ingot price would drop further, pressed down by the downward movement of 3-month zinc on LME. Zinc oxide price may follow suit in the coming days.

The source said that the plant purchased some stocks of zinc ingot at around RMB26,000/t (USD3,462/t) delivered to its warehouse, when the mainstream price was at around RMB25,900/t (RMB3,449/t).

Another producer in Tianjin offered zinc oxide 99.7%min at around RMB24,800/t (USD3,302/t) processed from zinc scraps, almost unchanged with that half a month ago.

The source revealed that most producers mainly sell zinc oxide to regular customers and received few inquiries from new buyers. "As zinc consumption would not change greatly in the near future, zinc oxide market would keep stable in the following weeks," said the source. The plant is running with an output of 350tpm.

...
Read more...

Antimony export market unchanged

The export market for antimony ingot remains unchanged. While Chinese state-owned exporting enterprises still complain their offers of USD5,700-5,800/t FOB are unacceptable for foreign buyers, concluded deals have been reported at USD5,500-5,600/t FOB.

A Japanese trader reported that offers from Chinese state-owned exporting enterprises are as high as USD5,750-5,800/t FOB, USD150-200/t higher than those offered by some others suppliers. "We can understand why Chinese exporters hold the high offer as their purchasing price runs high and the export of the material is restrained according to the export policy," said the source. "However, neither consumers nor us cannot accept the price."

The source trades small quantities of antimony ingot, and only buys one or two containers after receiving inquiries from customers. The source claimed that they could obtain antimony ingot at a level slightly higher than USD5,600/t CIF Japan but acknowledged that those materials might be shipped out of China through illegal ways.

A Guangdong-based trader revealed that demand of antimony ingot from Asian market is not strong. "Major consumers usually sign long-term supplying contracts to satisfy the demand for production, and some-to-medium consumers only buy from hand to mouth due to the high price" said the source.

The source did not conclude any antimony ingot deals in the past week and reported some Korean and Japanese buyers would not like to accept the offer of around USD5,600/t FOB. Meanwhile, the quotation of USD5,650/t CIF Rotterdam was also turned down buy European customers.

...
Read more...

Manganese market in stalemate

Manganese metal price has been declining to the current level of RMB17,300-17,600/t (USD2,304-2,344/t) ex works. Little business goes on and most participants tend to watch and wait, but sources think the market will not recover soon due to the low demand and large stock.

A Hunan-based producer, who is running at its full capacity of 10,000tpy and holds a stock of 300t on hand, did not sell material recently due to the low bid from buyers. The producer informed few deals were closed at RMB17,300-17,400/t (USD2,304-2,317/t) ex works, but he refused to sell below RMB17,500/t (USD2,330/t) ex works. "Export market also keeps slack with large stockpile in Rotterdam, so the domestic price can only be pulled up by internal demand," commented the source. "Therefore, the market will not recover soon."

The source revealed that the price of sulphate rose by around RMB100/t (USD13/t) from last month to RMB800/t (USD107/t). The manganese ore in their mine was RMB700/t (USD93/t) last month and may rise a little in the coming days, while the market price for manganese ore is RMB700-800/t (USD93-107/t) delivered to plants.

A Guizhou-based producer, with a full capacity of 30,000tpy, revealed that the market is in an unstable state compared with the previous years. The slack market is affected by many factors. The demand from steel mills has not reached the level as expected and most smelters hold large stock. The consumers stay away from the market for lower prices while the smelters also hold back from selling and hope the market to turn better.

According to the source, the market seems to be chaotic and no one can predict when it will warm up. If the supply of raw materials keeps stable and demand moves up, the market is likely to rebound in mid-November or early December. However, it is hard to predict what a level it will reach. Most participants are waiting for a clear situation.

The market will keep in stalemate for a while and may warm up in mid-November. However, participants think the rising scope will not be large and it still needs time to identify the direction.

...
Read more...

Tin concentrate price remains firm

As the supply of tin concentrate is still unable to meet the strong demand from smelters in Chinese market, tin concentrate prices remain firm.

A source from a Guangxi-based tin mine said that they just sold 20t of tin concentrate 60%min at the high price of RMB130,000/t (USD17,310/t) with VAT included early this week. "It is the highest price we ever sold," said the source, adding that the prices of tin concentrate grading 60%min and 40%min are at about RMB119,000/t (USD15,846/t) and RMB115,000-116,000/t (USD15,313-15,446/t) with VAT excluded respectively.

The source commented that the supply of high grade tin concentrate is tight in domestic market, so many smelters mixed the high grade material with low grade one.

The mine halted production early this month, either do other mines in the local market. Therefore, the supply of the material will become tighter in the coming weeks. As for the prospect of tin market, the source said that smelters have to put tin ingot price at above RMB147,000/t (USD19,573/t), if they purchase tin concentrate at the above prices.

A Guangdong-based tin concentrate supplier offered tin concentrate 50%min at RMB125,000/t (USD16,644/t) with VAT included, the same level compared with that last week.

The source reported that they are holding about 20t of tin concentrate, but not in a hurry to sell the material in the short term. "On the back of tight supply, the price of the material may continue to rise in the coming weeks," said the source.

...
Read more...

Chinese high-purity magnesia sells good

Chinese high-purity magnesia market keeps firm these days with the prevailing price in the range of RMB1,600-1,700/t (USD213-227/t) ex works for high-purity 97%min, participants reported.

A Haicheng-based smelter, with an output of 10,000t of high-purity magnesia, sells 300t of the material at RMB1,650/t (USD220/t) ex works last week. The smelter insisted on their concluded price at RMB1,550-1,600/t(USD207-214/t) ex works for high-purity 96.8%min this week.

"There were no much obvious changes these days for high-purity magnesia, because the demand keeps stable," said the source. "We received orders from long-term customers and new customers as well."

A smelter in Anshan, running at its full capacity of 50,000t of high-purity magnesia, received many orders in October. "We are fulfilling the orders received in early October," said the source.

The smelter sells high-purity 98%min which is his leading and best selling material at RMB1,750/t (USD233/t) ex works in the two months.

Participants show an optimistic viewpoint towards high-purity magnesia market in October in view of the orders they received.

...
Read more...

FCC metals passivation sdditives applied to catalyst

<a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/JiefuAntimonyTrioxide"><img src=" http://feeds.feedburner.com/JiefuAntimonyTrioxide.gif" style="border:0" alt="JIEFU antimony trioxide"/></a>
Abstract

A process and apparatus for incorporating additives into a circulating inventory of equilibrium catalyst in a fluid catalyst cracking (FCC) unit are disclosed. Hot regenerated catalyst is removed from the FCC regenerator, cooled, optionally subjected to magnetic catalyst separation, and at least a portion of the cooled catalyst is contacted with a solution of an additive material without forming a separated liquid phase. Additive treated catalyst is recycled to the FCC unit, preferably directly into the regenerator. <span class="fullpost">
Claims

We claim:
1. In a fluidized catalytic cracking (FCC) process with a circulating inventory of equilibrium catalyst passing from a cracking reactor wherein hydrocarbon feed is cracked to produce lighter catalytically cracked products and spent catalyst is regenerated in a catalyst regenerator at catalyst regeneration conditions to produce regenerated catalyst at a temperature of 1200 to 1600° F. which is recycled to the cracking reactor, the improvement comprising:

(a) removing a portion of the regenerated catalyst from the catalyst regenerator;

(b) cooling the regenerated catalyst in a catalyst cooler to produce cooled catalyst;

(c) adding to the cooled catalyst a solution of an additive material which comprises antimony in an amount less than or equal to the amount of liquid needed for incipient wetness impregnation to produce additive-impregnated catalyst;

(d) recycling to the cracking reactor at least a portion of the additive impregnated catalyst.

2. The improvement of claim 1 wherein said catalyst is cooled in step (b) to a temperature below 500° F.

3. The improvement of claim 1 wherein said catalyst is cooled in step (b) to a temperature below 300° F.

4. The improvement of claim 1 wherein said regenerated catalyst has a spectrum of metals levels, including higher and lower metals levels and cooled catalyst is charged to a magnetic catalyst separator to produce a higher metals reject fraction which is discarded and a lower metals recycle fraction, and wherein the solution is added to the lower metals recycle fraction.

5. The improvement of claim 1 wherein the additive is an oxide of antimony.

6. The improvement of claim 1 wherein the additive is an aqueous solution.

7. In a fluidized catalytic cracking (FCC) process with a circulating inventory of equilibrium catalyst passing from a reactor wherein hydrocarbon feed is cracked to produce lighter, catalytically cracked products and spent catalyst, which is regenerated in a catalyst regenerator at catalyst regeneration conditions to produce hot regenerated FCC catalyst which is recycled to the cracking reactor comprising:

(a) removing a portion of regenerated catalyst from the catalyst regenerator;

(b) cooling the removed catalyst in a catalyst cooler to produce cooled catalyst;

(c) magnetically separating the cooled catalyst into at least one high magnetic susceptibility fraction and at least one lower magnetic susceptibility fraction;

(d) removing from said FCC process at least one high magnetic susceptibility fraction;

(e) contacting a lower magnetic susceptibility fraction with a solution of metals passivation additive material which comprises an antimony compound in an amount up to the amount of liquid needed for incipient wetness impregnation of said low magnetic susceptibility fraction to produce a free-flowing fluidized treated catalyst fraction;

(f) recycling to said catalytic cracking unit at least a portion of said treated catalyst.

8. The process of claim 7 wherein the cooling step (b) cools the catalyst to below 300° F.

9. The process of claim 7 wherein the antimony compound is a soluble oxide.


Description

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to catalyst and additives for the fluidized catalytic cracking process (FCC) and MagnaCat.RTM. magnetic separation of FCC equilibrium catalyst.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Fluidized catalytic cracking (FCC) is well known and widely used for conversion of heavier feeds boiling in the gas oil and heavier range to lighter products including gasoline.

One of the problems encountered in FCC processing is that the heavy feeds processed contain metals, such as nickel and vanadium, which deposit on the circulating FCC catalyst. The deposited Ni+V act as catalyst poisons, promoting undesirable coke formation as well as excessive hydrogen and light gas formation.

Refiners have resorted to several tactics to avoid nickel and vanadium poisoning during FCC processing. The approaches could be arbitrarily classified three ways:

1. Keep Ni+V out of the FCC feed;

2. Leave Ni+V in the feed, but passivate or trap the metals once they reach the FCC catalyst; and

3. Allow Ni+V to deposit on the catalyst and use a magnetic separation process to remove the oldest, most metals-contaminated catalyst.

Approach no. 1, keeping the Ni+V out of the feed, has been used for over fifty years. The simplest and highly effective way to keep metals out is to distill the FCC feed. Distilled feeds are usually metals-free, or have such low metals levels that no special steps need to be taken to deal with Ni/V contamination. Distillation is simple, inexpensive, and widely used. One drawback is that distillation keeps significant amounts of potentially high value, readily convertible hydrocarbon out of the FCC unit. Phrased another way, if a refiner limits the feed to the FCC unit to distillable feeds, a lot of profit is left in the non-distillable, or residue fraction of the crude oil charged to the refinery. Solvent deasphalting of heavy feeds is effective at removing most metal contaminants from even non-distillable hydrocarbon feed. Deasphalted oil (DAO) can be charged to the FCC, with the asphalt fraction used for road construction, or sent to a coker. The drawback to this approach is the significant capital and the operating expense of operating a de-asphalting unit.

Most refiners are driven by economics to process some residual fractions in their FCC units and use approach no. 2, metals passivation. Thus, many FCC units now process feeds with a few weight percent resid up to 10 or 20 weight percent resid. With such feeds comes Ni and/or V catalyst contamination. One way to tolerate higher metals levels on FCC equilibrium catalyst is to passivate the deposited contaminating metals. Although many metal passivators are known, an especially effective and widely used passivator is antimony.

Metals passivation, usually by antimony addition, is probably the most popular method in the world for solving the problem of heavy metals in feeds. There are some drawbacks to use of Sb for metals passivation. Antimony is expensive, potentially toxic, and fugacious. It is difficult to run an accurate antimony balance around a typical FCC unit. Some of the antimony is believed to deposit on the walls of fired heaters, or perhaps on other solid surfaces within the FCC unit. There is enough problem with such deposits that U.S. Pat. No. 4,167,471 was granted on the discovery that adding the antimony compound after the FCC feed heater, rather than before, increased the amount of antimony that ended up on the catalyst.

Even with antimony injection after the FCC feed preheater, much of the antimony addition has been difficult to trace. Because of difficulties with Sb addition, refiners are now considering approach no. 3, magnetic beneficiation. The third method of dealing with excessive amounts of Ni and/or V in the FCC feed is to use the MagnaCat.RTM. magnetic catalyst separation process developed by Ashland Petroleum Company, Refining Process Services and the M.W. Kellogg Company. More details of this process are disclosed in one or more of the following patents:

U.S. Pat. No. 4,406,773 discloses magnetic separation of high activity catalyst from low activity catalyst.

U.S. Pat. No. 5,106,486 (Re. 35,046) teaches adding iron compound continuously or periodically to the circulating catalyst.

U.S. Pat. No. 5,147,527 covers the concept of using a magnetic rare earth roller device (RERMS) for magnetic separation.

U.S. Pat. No. 5,171,424 teaches the use of highly paramagnetic heavy rare earths as Magnetic Hook™ additives that increase catalyst performance.

U.S. Pat. No. 5,190,635 teaches accumulation of iron on the catalyst and formation of superparamagnetic or ferromagnetic species.

U.S. Pat. No. 5,230,869 covers the discovery of a highly superparamagnetic species, which when present in aged equilibrium catalyst, further improves separation due to its high magnetic susceptibility compared to normal paramagnetic iron.

U.S. Pat. No. 5,328,594 teaches use of heavy rare earths as Magnetic Hook™ additives.

U.S. Pat. No. 5,364,827 teaches adding amounts of magnetically active moieties, over time, so the moiety deposits on catalyst or sorbent in an FCC unit or similar circulating hydrocarbon conversion unit which can be separated from catalyst which has been in the system a shorter time.

U.S. Pat. No. 5,393,412 teaches a catalyst recovery unit ancillary to an FCC or similar unit, which permits magnetic separation, sieving and attriting of equilibrium catalyst.

U.S. Pat. No. 5,538,624 teaches retaining specialty additives by doping them with lots of magnetic metals.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

We have discovered a better way to add additives such as antimony and Magnetic Hook™ additives to an FCC unit with a magnetic catalyst separation unit. We discovered that we could significantly increase the efficiency of a catalyst additive by employing one, and preferably two, mechanisms around the magnetic separation unit.

The primary mechanism for increased retention of liquid additive on FCC catalyst is believed to be regenerating the catalyst to produce clean, regenerated catalyst, then cooling below 500° F., and then spraying the cooled catalyst with a solution, preferably a fine mist of an aqueous solution, containing the desired additive. Ideally, the cooled, treated, catalyst is then sent back to the catalyst regenerator to, in effect, calcine the additive and fix it more permanently on the equilibrium catalyst.

Another mechanism for improving additive addition is to cool the catalyst, pass it through a magnetic separation unit, such as a MagnaCat.RTM., and add additive only to that portion of the catalyst destined for recycle to the FCC unit. If 10 tons/day of equilibrium catalyst are charged to the magnetic separation unit, with 2 tons/day rejected to landfill, the additive would be applied exclusively to the 8 tons/day recycle fraction, with none applied to the reject fraction.

The effect of these two approaches is cumulative. In the case of a 20/80 reject/recycle magnetic separation process, spraying a manganese compound on the recycle fraction, rather than the total fraction, increases the apparent effectiveness of the manganese by 25%.

Because addition of an aqueous solution of additives, e.g., antimony to cooled, regenerated equilibrium catalyst is roughly 90 to 100% efficient, as compared to perhaps 50% efficient when added to the FCC feed upstream of the FCC preheater, the apparent effectiveness of antimony injection is roughly doubled.

A refiner using our approach to manganese or antimony addition could make from roughly 2 to 2.5 times better use of the manganese or antimony, as compared to prior art injection methods involving adding it to the FCC feed.

Accordingly, in one aspect, the present invention provides an improvement in a fluidized catalytic cracking (FCC) process with a circulating inventory of equilibrium catalyst passing from a cracking reactor wherein hydrocarbon feed is cracked to produce lighter catalytically cracked products and spent catalyst, and spent catalyst is regenerated in a catalyst regenerator at catalyst regeneration conditions to produce regenerated catalyst at a temperature of 1200 to 1600° F. which is recycled to the cracking reactor. The improvement comprises: (a) removing a portion of the regenerated catalyst from the catalyst regenerator; (b) cooling the regenerated catalyst in a catalyst cooler to produce cooled catalyst; (c) adding to the cooled catalyst a solution of an additive material in an amount less than or equal to the amount of liquid needed for an incipient wetness impregnation to produce additive-impregnated catalyst; and (d) recycling to the cracking reaction at least a portion of the additive-impregnated catalyst. The catalyst is preferably cooled to a temperature below 500° F., more preferably to a temperature below 300° F. Preferably, the regenerated catalyst has a spectrum of metals levels, including higher and lower metals levels, and the cooled catalyst is charged to a magnetic catalyst separator to produce a higher metals reject fraction which is discarded and a lower metals reject fraction, wherein the additive solution is added to the lower metals recycle fraction. The additive material can comprise a metals passivation additive, a magnetic hook material, or the like. The metals passivation additive preferably comprises antimony, more preferably an oxide of antimony, especially in an aqueous solution. The additive solution can also comprise a magnetic hook, in which case the recycle fraction has a relatively low magnetic susceptibility, but after treatment with the magnetic hook, the recycle fraction has an increased magnetic susceptibility. Other passivation elements which can be included in the solution include tin, manganese, bismuth and the like.

In another aspect, the present invention provides a fluidized catalyst cracking (FCC) process with a circulating inventory of equilibrium catalyst passing from a reactor wherein hydrocarbon feed is cracked to produce lighter catalytically cracked products and spent catalyst which is regenerated in a catalyst regenerator at catalyst regeneration conditions to produce hot regenerated FCC catalyst which is recycled to the cracking reactor. The process comprises the steps of: (a) removing a portion of regenerated catalyst from the catalyst regenerator; (b) cooling the removed catalyst in a catalyst cooler to produce cooled catalyst; (c) magnetically separating the cooled catalyst into at least one high magnetic susceptibility fraction and at least one lower magnetic susceptibility fraction; (d) removing from the FCC process at least one high magnetic susceptibility fraction; (e) contacting a lower magnetic susceptibility fraction with a solution of an additive material in an amount up to the amount of liquid needed for incipient wetness impregnation of the low magnetic susceptibility fraction to produce a free-flowing, fluidized treated catalytic fraction; and (f) recycling to the catalytic cracking unit at least a portion of the treated catalyst.

In a further aspect, the present invention provides an apparatus for the fluidized catalytic cracking of a hydrocarbon feed. The apparatus includes (a) a reactor for contacting the hydrocarbon feed with a source of hot regenerated catalyst from a catalyst regenerator; (b) a magnetic catalyst separation unit operatively associated with the regenerator for producing a high magnetic susceptibility fraction which is rejected from the catalytic cracking unit and a lower magnetic susceptibility fraction; and (c) an additive incorporation means for receiving the lower magnetic susceptibility fraction from the magnetic catalyst separation unit, comprising means for incorporating an additive solution onto the lower magnetic susceptibility fraction and means for recycling the resulting treated fraction to the regenerator.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING

The FIGURE is a schematic diagram of an FCC unit and a magnetic catalyst separation unit according to the principles of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Bottoms 10 derived from distilling off a portion of crude oil enters the riser reactor 16 at 11. In the riser 16 the reduced crude contacts regenerated catalyst returning from the regenerator via line 15 and travels up the riser 16 cracking the reduced crude. Separator 17 produces product in line 18 and spent catalyst in line 19 which is contaminated with coke and metals from the reduced crude. The spent catalyst from line 19 enters the regenerator 20 and is oxidized with air via line 21 to burn off coke and thereby regenerate the catalyst for return to the riser 16 via line 15. About 8% of the regenerated catalyst is diverted through line 24 to catalyst cooler 25 and to feed to magnetic separator 26, where it falls onto belt 27, moves past roller 28, a high intensity rare earth-containing permanent magnetic roller which splits the catalyst into two or more portions 29 to 32. More magnetic portions, e.g. 29, and/or 29 and 30 are rejected for chemical reclaiming, metals recovery, or disposal. The less magnetic (less metal-contaminated) portions 31 and/or 31 and 32 travel through line 33 back to the regenerator 20. Manganese additive 9 may be a Magnetic Hook™ additive either added in amounts of 0.1 to 100 ppm to the feedstock in an organic solvent or water at 10 or on the catalyst at the bottom of the riser 11 prior to catalyst contact with oil, if desired.

In the present process, we spray on a solution of a catalyst additive material after cooling the catalyst in catalyst cooler 25 but before recycle of the catalyst regenerator 20. Metals passivating additive is preferably sprayed onto the recycle catalyst fraction via nozzle 100, receiving Sb solution from line 110 and discharging a finely atomized spray 105 onto the recycle fraction. Additive may also be added via injection means 120.

If desired, additive may be sprayed directly onto catalyst onto belt 27 or via one or more sprayers associated with one of the collection bins used to collect catalyst for recycle to the FCC unit. It is also possible to directly inject additive solution into the line transporting catalyst back to regenerator 20.

Regardless of where additive solution is added, it preferably is added in a controlled manner so that clumping or sticking of the catalyst does not occur.

The process and apparatus of the present invention provide a unique and better way to add soluble additives to FCC catalyst.

Preferably the additive is an antimony compound, most preferably an aqueous solution of an antimony compound. Reference is made to the following patents on antimony addition to provide more details on suitable antimony compounds and the amounts of antimony that should be added: U.S. Pat. No. 4,167,471; U.S. Pat. No. 4,255,287; U.S. Pat. No. 4,562,167; and U.S. Pat. No. 5,378,349.

The amount of antimony or additive present on catalyst in our process will be essentially the same as the amount of antimony needed on catalyst in prior art processes.

In addition to conventional metal passivation agents, such as antimony, it is also possible to add other materials using the process and apparatus of the present invention. Magnetic Hooks™ additive may be efficiently added using our invention. Some Magnetic Hooks™ additives also function as acidity enhancing additives, so that manganese may be added as a magnetic hook or for its ability to enhance activity, provide more resistance to deactivation, increase conversion and reduce coke and hydrogen yields, all as discussed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,198,098. Other additives which can be added to the catalyst according to the present invention include water soluble compounds of tin, manganese, bismuth and the like. Carbon monoxide combustion additives, such as an aqueous solution of a platinum compound, can also be sprayed onto the catalyst using the apparatus of the present invention. The apparatus can also be used to increase the rare earth content of the catalyst to improve steam stability of the zeolites, or as a Magnetic Hook™ additive. The process can also be used to add known, or yet to be developed, additives for control of NOx, SOx, and the like.

It is essential to remove the catalyst from the regenerator and cool it before contacting the regenerated catalyst with any additive. Preferably the catalyst is cooled more than 100° F., more preferably cooled to a temperature in the range of 200-300° F. This temperature is high enough to promote rapid vaporization of the solvent in the additive solution, but not so high as to prevent good contacting of the additive solution with the catalyst surface. If the catalyst surface temperature is too high, there may be impaired contacting of liquid/catalyst, much as water never wets the surface of a frying pan which is too hot.

It is preferable to have a certain minimum temperature, otherwise the catalyst can easily form clumps when any liquid droplets that are oversized are inadvertently sprayed on the catalyst. We try never to have a stable liquid phase in our process. It may seem a little unusual to call for catalyst "impregnation" when the catalyst temperature at the start of the process at least is preferably above the boiling point of water, but that is preferred to minimize fluid handling problems.

EXAMPLES

A number of experiments were performed in our laboratories to determine the validity of this processing concept. The examples did not include magnetic separation in order that the test procedure might be simplified. The test also represents an upper limit on use of additive solution, i.e. an incipient wetness procedure was used. In practice we would probably use less impregnating solution to avoid formation of clumps or sticky masses of water-soaked catalyst.

EXAMPLE 1

The catalyst tested was a 50/50 blend of two commercially available catalysts available under the trade designations RAMCAT and NOVA which had been steamed and metallated using our standard procedures. The additive used was an aqueous solution of antimony pentoxide, methanol, ethylene glycol and amines obtained commercially as NALCO 5006. The antimony content was measured to be 21 weight percent. There were three sets of runs made each in duplicate: conventional metals addition, spray-on-metals addition, and baseline with no metals addition. The additive was added at a target ratio of 0.5/1 Sb/Ni by weight. The nickel content of the catalyst was 1400 ppm.

Baseline--No Metals Addition

Three cycles were run. Each cycle was run with 188 g of feed and 564 g of catalyst without an antimony addition for a catalyst/oil ratio of 3.0.

Conventional Metals Additive Addition

The conventionally added antimony additive was added to the feed in three cycles. Each cycle was run with 188 g of FCC feed with 564 g of catalyst blend.

Spray-On Metals Additive Addition

The antimony additive was diluted with water and sprayed onto the catalyst with a hand operated plastic spray bottle. The catalyst (800 g) was put into a ceramic crucible while it was sprayed with the additive solution. The additive (2.67 g) was diluted with the calculated amount of water to get the catalyst to incipient wetness (pore volume times the amount of catalyst ((0.32 ml/g)*(800 g=256 cc)). The sprayed on catalyst was then calcined in air at 1100° F. for four hours. The antimony laden catalyst was then run for three cycles. Each cycle was run with 188 g of FCC feed with 564 g of catalyst blend for a catalyst/oil ratio of 3.0.

Catalyst samples obtained from each of the methods were analyzed for metals and microactivity test (MAT) analysis. The results are presented in Table 1

                  TABLE 1
______________________________________
Additive In
Sprayed On
Property No Additive Feedstock Additive
______________________________________
MAT (vol %) 76 76 78
Hydrogen Factor 10.0 9.9 6.7
Antimony (wt %) <0.01 0.02 0.09
Nickel (wt %) 0.14 0.13 0.15
Sb/Ni Ratio <0.07 0.15 0.60
______________________________________


EXAMPLE 2

The procedures of Example 1 were repeated using a 100% NOVA catalyst. The results are presented in Table 2.

                  TABLE 2
______________________________________
Additive In
Sprayed On
Property No Additive Feedstock Additive
______________________________________
MAT (vol %) 76 75 76
Hydrogen Factor 10.0 8.8 6.2
Antimony (wt %) <0.01 0.024 0.1
Nickel (wt %) 0.14 0.13 0.14
Sb/Ni Ratio <0.07 0.16 0.71
______________________________________


The above data show that antimony was effective at reducing hydrogen yield, and was nearly an order of magnitude better when added as a spray onto the catalyst than when introduced with the hydrocarbon feedstock. Antimony appears to be effective only if it deposits on the catalyst; the decrease in hydrogen yield is directly proportional to the amount of antimony deposited on the catalyst. Adding antimony with the feedstock resulted in consistently low antimony recoveries, but quite surprisingly, nearly all of the antimony was recovered when sprayed as a mist onto the catalyst.

ps:
We can supply any quantity and any kind of Antimony products from stock.would you please inform us how many you need and your target price,  then we will confirm ASAP. We are sincerely hope to do business with you and establish long term business relationship with your respectable company. 

Look forward to hearing from you soon.
 
Best regards,

Sam Xu 
Contact me:
MSN: xubiao_1996@hotmail.com 
GMAIL: samjiefu@gmail.com 
SKPYE:jiefu1996
 
<a alt="Blog and Blogs" href="http://jiefuantimonytrioxide.blogspot.com"><b><font face="Arial" color="#003366" size="1">
Chinese antimony market</font></b></a>
<br/></span>

...
Read more...

************Honor*************

************Honor*************