Chloride Management in Platforming Unit: PARCO-Mid Country Refinery
Chloride Management in Platforming Unit: PARCO-Mid Country Refinery
Chloride Management in Platforming Unit: PARCO-Mid Country Refinery
1.0 OBJECTIVE:
The objective of this report is to highlight the impact of chloride injection in the platforming
circuit, its downstream units and to analyzes the different technologies and practices
available to mitigate high chlorides in the platforming circuit.
2.0 INTRODUCTION:
Some of the Platforming reactions are acid-catalyzed, while others are promoted by a metallic
catalyst function. Therefore, it is necessary that a Platforming catalyst have a proper balance
between the metal and the acid functions. For this purpose, catalysts are dosed with organic
chloride, which promotes acidic catalyzed reaction. However, it also leads to formation
chloride compounds in the product streams at low ppm levels. If untreated, these
chlorides, containing hydrogen chloride (HCl) and various organic chlorides, cause
operational upsets. These problems include formation and deposition of ammonium
chloride, chloride related corrosion, green oil formation, poisoning of downstream
catalysts which affect product quality.
The tracking of chlorides and use of proper analysis techniques for the measurement of
HCl and organic chlorides in reformer product streams is critical for effective chloride
management in a running reformer unit to prevent associated operational issues. HCl is
comparatively easy to measure and detect more reliably. As a result, chloride guard
product developments have focused on improving the capacity of HCl removal.
(NH4Cl) deposit in the exchangers, especially when wash water practices are
inadequate. If austenitic stainless steel is present, chloride stress corrosion cracking
presents an additional metallurgical challenge.
4.0CHLORIDE ABSORBERS:
In past, Absorbents were developed to effectively remove HCl. Even so, performance of
the ad- or ab-sorbent products has proven to be variable between one catalytic reformer
duty and another.
More recently, a growing concern for many refinery operators has become the removal of
organic chloride species. These compounds are less easy to detect and measure and
also are less readily ad- or ab-sorbed. The effectiveness of the available chloride guard
products is limited although improvements are being made to the formulations.
At the operating conditions in the reformer, the organic chloride used for dosing the
catalyst breaks down to HCl that is believed to be the active chloriding species. The
chloride, however, is not irreversibly bonded to the catalyst surface. Hence, the need for
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PROCESS DEPARTMENT Platforming Unit
Chloride Management in Platforming Unit U-300
continuous dosing, and chloride is inevitably found in the product streams leaving the
catalytic reforming reactors at low ppm levels.
Refineries have installed dedicated chloride guard beds to remove the chloride at various
locations in the downstream sections of the catalytic reformer. The nature and severity of
the problems experienced also influence the number and location of these guard beds.
A prevalent view was that the chloride was predominantly HCl or that the problems
experienced were dominated by the HCl component of the chlorides but studies have
showed that there has been a marked increase in concern for detection and removal of
the organic chloride species.
Chloride guards of all types, particularly in gas phase duties, do not give the expected
performance in certain conditions. After some analysis, the contributing factors seem to
be formation of green oil in the chloride guard bed and a higher level of olefins, aromatics,
and complex heavy hydrocarbons. A higher level of olefins, aromatics, and complex
heavy hydrocarbons adsorbs onto the guard material and fouls the material by blocking
access to the reactive sites.
Physical Adsorption
The commonly available chloride guards for Chloride removal in gaseous phase are
based on simple activated alumina. The removal mechanism is physical adsorption
and the high alumina surface area is required to boost the capacity for HCl removal.
the activated aluminas have generally demonstrated a capacity of around 5–10 wt%
chloride when spent.
Chemical Adsorption
Chemical adsorbents are composed of Na, Zn and Al oxides. The performance of
the absorbent is based not only on the chemical composition but also on the
dispersion of the active agents and pore structure of the particles. The chemical
adsorbents demonstrated a capacity of approximately 40 wt% chloride.
Hybrid Adsorption
Promoted alumina are hydrid adsorbents in which a high alumina surface area has
been doped with a quantity of basic metal oxide or similar salts, often of sodium or
calcium. The alumina component removes HCl. The promoter (usually Sodium
Oxide), however, chemically reacts with the HCI giving an additional chloride removal
mechanism referred to as chemical absorption. The promoted aluminas have
generally demonstrated a capacity of approximately 24 wt% chloride.
For a new unit, it is licensor experience that generally governs the location and
arrangement of chloride guard beds. Location also depends upon the refiner’s
preferences when options are available. Possible locations of chloride guard beds in
a reformer unit are;
The olefins breakthrough in Naphtha Stream from upstream crude distillation unit,
hydrocracking unit or inability of NHT catalyst to process these olefins can cause
formation of organic chloride.
The leakage rate of chlorides from the reformer increases as the catalyst
incrementally loses surface area with each regeneration. A lower surface area
catalyst requires a lower H2O/HCl ratio in order to maintain constant catalyst
chloride content. Chloride addition to the catalyst must be increased in the
regenerator to obtain the required lower H2O/HCl ratio since the H2O
concentration remains relatively constant. This increased addition of chloride to the
catalyst results in shortening the lifetime of the chloride adsorbent.
The impact of organic chlorides becomes more severe with aging of the reformer
catalyst. With aging, the olefins in the reformer product streams increase and more
HCl dosing is required to maintain the chloride on the catalyst. Partitioning of
olefins happens in the gas phase as well as the liquid phase. Typically, 800-1000
ppmv olefins in net gas and 0.7 - 0.9 wt% olefins have been observed in reformate.
However, this strongly depends upon weighted average inlet temperature (WAIT),
loss in catalyst surface area, and platinum dispersion in the catalyst.
It is worth mentioning that if testing has indicated that HCl is not detectable in the
product streams but downstream corrosion is still occurring it may be that chlorides
are present but in the form of organic chlorides.
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Chloride Management in Platforming Unit U-300
Hence, the best adsorbent selection & its replacement must be based on organic
chlorides breakthrough to avoid upsets in downstream units. Following are the
qualities to ensure a good quality adsorbent activity:
7.0 CONCLUSION:
Chlorides can enter refinery process units via several routes, mainly from Reforming
units. They will adversely affect unit’s reliability. The primary keys to controlling the
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PROCESS DEPARTMENT Platforming Unit
Chloride Management in Platforming Unit U-300
adverse effects is the elimination of the incoming chlorides, intercepting the chlorides that
do enter, and controlling the effects of the remaining chlorides.
8.0 RECOMMENDATIONS:
1. To determine the chloride content of most hydrocarbon streams down to less than 3
ppm X-rays, Wet chemical methods based on potentiometric titration with methanol
and ion chromatography or any other suitable method can be used.
2. Crude analysis for inorganic and organic chlorides in the crude before and after the
de-salters. Monitoring Chloride contents of any slops or recovered oil streams
reprocessed. If the chloride problem is in a specific boiling range, Chlorides to be
checked in that boiling range of the crude.
3. The use of proper technique for measuring the organic or total chlorides instead of
relying only on HCl measurement deciding factor for the absorber bed replacement
rather than time based calculation and to avoid organic chloride breakthrough
(UOP779 for organic chlorides and ASTMD7536 for total chlorides).
4. A detailed study is required to choose and replace the adsorbents which produce less
organic chlorides and can capture more organic chlorides instead of HCL.