Abstract

The coking tendency under steam cracking conditions of CoatAlloy, a newly developed multilayered Al barrier coating deposited on a commercial 25/35 Cr–Ni base alloy and aimed at reducing the coke formation under hydrocarbon atmosphere at >1100 K temperatures was investigated. It was benchmarked to the uncoated commercial 25/35 Cr–Ni base alloy with a known low coking tendency in ethane steam cracking in a pilot plant. The influence of process conditions, such as coil outlet temperature, presulfidation, continuous sulfur addition and aging was evaluated. The applied coating resulted in a reduced coking tendency as well as reduced yields of both CO and CO2 compared to the uncoated coil. The surface of both tested reactor materials was studied by means of SEM and EDX analysis. Further scale up was assessed by simulations of an industrial ethane cracker. All the findings show that the CoatAlloy barrier coating is capable of reducing coke formation and maintains its anticoking activity over multiple cracking–d...

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