Ray, This also brings back some fantastic memories.
When I was a kid calcium carbide was readily available. I wonder what
happened to my old carbide lantern and cannon? Anyway the memories were
about some really stupid things that we did. We had a lot of fun with
calcium carbide
, an old paint can and a pack of matches. We took the paint can and punched
a nail hole in the bottom. Then drop in a small piece of carbide and spit on
it. As soon as it started working I would place the lid back on the can. Now
aiming the can where nothing could get hurt or broke I set it on the ground
and held it in place with my foot. then  lighting a match and holding it
near the hole in the back of the can there was a loud boom and the lid would
sail about 20 feet. We use to purchase a two pound container for under $2.00
and this gave us several weeks of entertainment.
There was also a big bang cannon that I had. It was miniature replica of an
old cannon that had a place for a very small piece of calcium carbide
. It had a place where you added water and had a flint spark igniter similar
to that of an old Zippo lighter. IT This toy made a much safer loud bang. We
used the carbide lantern when we went camping, not with my parents but with
5 or 6 other ten year old kids.
Thanks for the memories.
By the way the paint can cannon was about 50 years ago.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Ray Boyce" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, October 08, 2007 4:13 AM
Subject: [BlindHandyMan] How is acetylene made?


Acetylene is a
colorless,
combustible gas with a distinctive
odor.
When acetylene is liquefied, compressed, heated, or mixed with air, it
becomes highly explosive. As a result special precautions are required
during its
production and handling. The most common use of acetylene is as a raw
material for the production of various organic chemicals including
1,4-butanediol,
which is widely used in the preparation of
polyurethane
and
polyester
plastics. The second most common use is as the fuel component in
oxy-acetylene
welding
and metal cutting. Some commercially useful acetylene compounds include
acetylene black,
which is used in certain dry-cell batteries, and
acetylenic
alcohols, which are used in the synthesis of vitamins.

Acetylene was discovered in 1836, when Edmund Davy was experimenting with
potassium
carbide.
One of his chemical reactions produced a
flammable
gas, which is now known as acetylene. In 1859, Marcel Morren successfully
generated acetylene when he used carbon electrodes to strike an electric arc
in
an atmosphere of hydrogen. The electric arc
tore
carbon atoms away from the electrodes and bonded them with hydrogen atoms to
form acetylene molecules. He called this gas carbonized hydrogen.

By the late 1800s, a method had been developed for making acetylene by
reacting
calcium carbide
with water. This generated a controlled flow of acetylene that could be
combusted in air to produce a brilliant white light. Carbide lanterns were
used
by miners and carbide lamps were used for street illumination before the
general availability of electric lights. In 1897, Georges Claude and A. Hess
noted
that acetylene gas could be safely stored by dissolving it in
acetone.
Nils Dalen used this new method in 1905 to develop long-burning, automated
marine and railroad signal lights. In 1906, Dalen went on to develop an
acetylene torch
for welding and metal cutting.

In the 1920s, the German firm
BASF
developed a process for manufacturing acetylene from natural gas and
petroleum-based
hydrocarbons.
The first plant went into operation in Germany in 1940. The technology came
to the United States in the early 1950s and quickly became the primary
method
of producing acetylene.

Demand for acetylene grew as new processes were developed for converting it
into useful plastics and chemicals. In the United States, demand peaked
sometime
between 1965 and 1970, then fell off sharply as new, lower-cost alternative
conversion materials were discovered. Since the early 1980s, the demand for
acetylene has grown slowly at a rate of about 2-4% per year.

In 1991, there were eight plants in the United States that produced
acetylene. Together they produced a total of 352 million lb (160 million kg)
of acetylene
per year. Of this production, 66% was derived from natural gas and 15% from
petroleum processing. Most acetylene from these two sources was used on or
near the site where it was produced to make other organic chemicals. The
remaining 19% came from calcium carbide. Some of the acetylene from this
source
was used to make organic chemicals, and the rest was used by regional
industrial gas producers to fill pressurized cylinders for local welding and
metal
cutting customers.

In Western Europe, natural gas and petroleum were the principal sources of
acetylene in 1991, while calcium carbide was the principal source in Eastern
Europe and Japan.

Raw Materials

Acetylene is a hydrocarbon consisting of two carbon atoms and two hydrogen
atoms. Its chemical symbol is C2H2. For commercial purposes, acetylene can
be
made from several different raw materials depending on the process used.

The simplest process reacts calcium carbide with water to produce acetylene
gas and a calcium carbonate
slurry,
called
hydrated lime.
The chemical reaction may be written as CaC2 + 2 H2O ? C2H2 + Ca(OH)2.

Other processes use natural gas, which is mostly
methane,
or a petroleum-based hydrocarbon such as crude oil,
naphtha,
or bunker C oil as raw materials. Coal can also be used. These processes use
high temperature to convert the raw materials into a wide variety of gases,
including hydrogen,
carbon monoxide,
carbon dioxide,
acetylene, and others. The chemical reaction for converting methane into
acetylene and hydrogen may be written 2 CH4 ? C2H2 + 3 H2. The other gases
are
the products of combustion with oxygen. In order to separate the acetylene,
it is dissolved in a
solvent
such as water,
anhydrous ammonia,
chilled
methanol,
or acetone, or several other solvents depending on the process.

The Manufacturing
Process

There are two basic conversion processes used to make acetylene. One is a
chemical reaction process, which occurs at normal temperatures. The other is
a
thermal cracking process, which occurs at extremely high temperatures.

Here are typical sequences of operations used to convert various raw
materials into acetylene by each of the two basic processes.

Chemical reaction process

Acetylene may be generated by the chemical reaction between calcium carbide
and water. This reaction produces a considerable amount of heat, which must
be removed to prevent the acetylene gas from exploding. There are several
variations of this process in which either calcium carbide is added to water
or water is added to calcium carbide. Both of these variations are called
wet processes because an excess amount of water is used to absorb the heat
of
the reaction. A third variation, called a dry process, uses only a limited
amount of water, which then
evaporates
as it absorbs the heat. The first variation is most commonly used in the
United States and is described below.
1. Most high-capacity acetylene generators use a rotating
screw conveyor
to feed calcium carbide granules into the reaction chamber, which has been
filled to a certain level with water. The granules measure about 0.08 in x
0.25
in (2 mm x 6 mm), which provides the right amount of exposed surfaces to
allow a complete reaction. The feed rate is determined by the desired rate
of
gas flow and is controlled by a pressure switch in the chamber. If too much
gas is being produced at one time, the pressure switch opens and cuts back
the feed rate.
2. To ensure a complete reaction, the solution of calcium carbide granules
and water is constantly
agitated
by a set of rotating paddles inside the reaction chamber. This also prevents
any granules from floating on the surface where they could over-heat and
ignite
the acetylene
3. The acetylene gas bubbles to the surface and is drawn off under low
pressure. As it leaves the reaction chamber, the gas is cooled by a
spray
of water. This water spray also adds water to the reaction chamber to keep
the reaction going as new calcium carbide is added. After the gas is cooled,
it passes through a flash arrester, which prevents any accidental
ignition
from equipment downstream of the chamber.
4. As the calcium carbide reacts with the water, it forms a slurry of
calcium carbonate, which sinks to the bottom of the chamber. Periodically
the reaction
must be stopped to remove the built-up slurry. The slurry is drained from
the chamber and pumped into a holding pond, where the calcium carbonate
settles
out and the water is drawn off. The thickened calcium carbonate is then
dried and sold for use as an industrial waste water treatment agent, acid
neutralizer,
or soil
conditioner
for road construction.

Thermal cracking process

Acetylene may also be generated by raising the temperature of various
hydrocarbons to the point where their atomic bonds break, or crack, in what
is known
as a thermal cracking process. After the hydrocarbon atoms break apart, they
can be made to rebond to form different materials than the original raw
materials.
This process is widely used to convert oil or natural gas to a variety of
chemicals.

There are several variations of this process depending on the raw materials
used and the method for raising the temperature. Some cracking processes use
an electric arc to heat the raw materials, while others use a combustion
chamber that burns part of the hydrocarbons to provide a flame. Some
acetylene
is generated as a coproduct of the steam cracking process used to make
ethylene.
In the United States, the most common process uses a combustion chamber to
heat and burn natural gas as described below.
1. Natural gas, which is mostly methane, is heated to about 1,200° F (650°
C). Preheating the gas will cause it to self-ignite once it reaches the
burner
and requires less oxygen for combustion.
2. The heated gas passes through a narrow pipe, called a venturi, where
oxygen is injected and mixed with the hot gas.
3. The mixture of hot gas and oxygen passes through a
diffuser,
which slows its velocity to the desired speed. This is critical. If the
velocity is too high, the incoming gas will blow out the flame in the
burner. If
the velocity is too low, the flame can flash back and ignite the gas before
it reaches the burner.
4. The gas mixture flows into the burner block, which contains more than 100
narrow channels. As the gas flows into each channel, it self-ignites and
produces
a flame which raises the gas temperature to about 2,730° F (1,500° C). A
small amount of oxygen is added in the burner to stabilize the combustion.
5. The burning gas flows into the reaction space just beyond the burner
where the high temperature cause about one-third of the methane to be
converted
into acetylene, while most of the rest of the methane is burned. The entire
combustion process takes only a few milliseconds.
6. The flaming gas is quickly quenched with water sprays at the point where
the conversion to acetylene is the greatest. The cooled gas contains a large
amount of carbon monoxide and hydrogen, with lesser amounts of carbon soot,
plus carbon dioxide, acetylene, methane, and other gases.
7. The gas passes through a
water scrubber,
which removes much of the carbon soot. The gas then passes through a second
scrubber where it is sprayed with a solvent known as N-methylpyrrolidinone
which
absorbs the acetylene, but not the other gases.
8. The solvent is pumped into a separation tower where the acetylene is
boiled out of the solvent and is drawn off at the top of the tower as a gas,
while
the solvent is drawn out of the bottom.

Storage and Handling

Because acetylene is highly explosive, it must be stored and handled with
great care. When it is transported through pipelines, the pressure is kept
very
low and the length of the pipeline is very short. In most chemical
production operations, the acetylene is transported only as far as an
adjacent plant,
or "over the fence" as they say in the chemical processing business.

When acetylene must be pressurized and stored for use in oxy-acetylene
welding and metal cutting operations, special storage cylinders are used.
The cylinders
are filled with an absorbent material, like
diatomaceous earth,
and a small amount of acetone. The acetylene is pumped into the cylinders at
a pressure of about 300 psi (2,070 kPa), where it is dissolved in the
acetone.
Once dissolved, it loses its explosive capability, making it safe to
transport. When the cylinder valve is opened, the pressure drop causes some
of the
acetylene to vaporize into gas again and flow through the connecting
hose
to the welding or cutting torch.

Quality Control

Grade B acetylene may have a maximum of 2% impurities and is generally used
for
oxyacetylene welding
and metal cutting. Acetylene produced by the chemical reaction process meets
this standard. Grade A acetylene may have no more than 0.5% impurities and
is generally used for chemical production processes. Acetylene produced by
the thermal cracking process may meet this standard or may require further
purification,
depending on the specific process and raw materials.

The Future

The use of acetylene is expected to continue a gradual increase in the
future as new applications are developed. One new application is the
conversion of
acetylene to ethylene for use in making a variety of polyethylene plastics.
In the past, a small amount of acetylene had been generated and wasted as
part
of the steam cracking process used to make ethylene. A new
catalyst
developed by Phillips Petroleum allows most of this acetylene to be
converted into ethylene for increased yields at a reduced overall cost.




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