Thermal Conversion Processes: Refining Operations
Thermal Conversion Processes: Refining Operations
Thermal Conversion Processes: Refining Operations
Refining Operations
Thermal Conversion Processes
THERMAL CRACKING
Thermal cracking is the thermal decomposition of straight-run and recycled heavy gas oils at
temperatures between about 450°C and 540°C under moderate pressure conditions.
Large oil molecules are thermally decomposed into smaller, lower boiling molecules.
Thermal cracking enables a refiner to produce cracked naphtha and cracked light gas oil products
from heavy gas oils, thus reducing the amount of heavy oils produced. Thermal cracking, as
practised commercially, normally involves the recycle of unconverted heavy gas oils, usually to
near extinction.
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Refining Operations
Thermal Conversion Processes
THERMAL CRACKING
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Refining Operations
Thermal Conversion Processes
VISBREAKING
Visbreaking enables a refiner to reduce the amount of fuel oil produced, because in addition
to reducing viscosity over the reaction, some conversion to lighter products also occurs and
the amount of cutter stock required to meet a given viscosity is consequently reduced.
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Refining Operations
Thermal Conversion Processes
VISBREAKING
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Refining Operations
Thermal Conversion Processes
COKING
Coking is a thermal cracking process in which a low value residual oil, such as an atmospheric or
vacuum residue, is converted into valuable distillate products, off-gas and petroleum coke.
It allows the refiner to significantly reduce the production of low value fuel oil.
o Fluid Coking consists of a class of coking processes that are less widely practiced compared to delayed
coking.
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Refining Operations
Thermal Conversion Processes
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Refining Operations
Catalytic Conversion Processes
CATALYTIC CRACKING
It remains the principal process used to convert heavy oil fractions into lighter products,
especially gasoline and uses a catalyst to speed up the cracking reaction. Catalysts include
zeolite, aluminum hydrosilicate, bauxite and silica-alumina.
Typical feedstocks for catalytic cracking are the high boiling distillates obtained from vacuum
distillation, and deasphalted or hydrogenated residues.
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Refining Operations
Catalytic Conversion Processes
HYDROCRACKING
Hydrocracking is a catalytic process that converts heavy oils to lighter fractions primarily by
means of aromatic saturation, cracking, and isomerization reactions in the presence of
hydrogen.
Hydrocracking has been widely accepted because of its capability to produce superior quality
products:
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Refining Operations
Catalytic Conversion Processes
Hydrocracking Configurations:
A) Balanced middle distillates and gasoline production from heavy crudes with high sulphur content;
B) Balanced middle distillates and gasoline production from heavy crudes with high sulphur content;
C) Production of high-quality fuels and high-grade lubes.
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