Lecture 1-Petroleum Oil Refinery Processes
Lecture 1-Petroleum Oil Refinery Processes
Lecture 1-Petroleum Oil Refinery Processes
PROCESSES
PETROLEUM REFINERY
7
CHEE 2404: Industrial Chemistry
http://climateerinvest.blogspot.in/2016/01/oil-barring-global-depression-supply.html
Crude Oil
The majority of crude oil is alkanes, cycloalkanes (naphthenes), aromatics,
polycyclic aromatics, S-containing compounds, etc.
Gasoline: branched alkanes
Diesel: linear alkanes
Conversion Processes
Treatment Processes
CHEE 2404: Industrial Chemistry 13
Fractionation Formulating and Blending
Physical and chemical processes
Chemical
Physical
Thermal Catalytic
Distillation Visbreaking Hydrotreating
Solvent extraction Delayed coking Catalytic reforming
Propane deasphalting Flexicoking Catalytic cracking
Solvent dewaxing Hydrocracking
Blending Catalytic dewaxing
Alkylation
Polymerization
Isomerization
• Crude oil often contains water, inorganic salts, suspended solids, and water-
soluble trace metals.
• Step 0 in the refining process is to remove these contaminants so as to reduce
corrosion, plugging, and fouling of equipment and to prevent poisoning
catalysts in processing units.
• The two most typical methods of crude-oil desalting are chemical and
electrostatic separation, and both use hot water as the extraction agent.
• In chemical desalting, water and chemical surfactant (demulsifiers) are added
to the crude, which is heated so that salts and other impurities dissolve or
attach to the water, then held in a tank to settle out.
• Electrical desalting is the application of high-voltage electrostatic charges to
concentrate suspended water globules in the bottom of the settling tank.
Surfactants are added only when the crude has a large amount of suspended
solids.
• A third (and rare) process filters hot crude using diatomaceous earth.
CHEE 2404: Industrial Chemistry 16
Desalting/dehydration
• The crude oil feedstock is heated to 65-180°C to reduce viscosity and
surface tension for easier mixing and separation of the water. The
temperature is limited by the vapor pressure of the crude-oil feedstock.
• In both methods other chemicals may be added. Ammonia is often
used to reduce corrosion. Caustic or acid may be added to adjust the
pH of the water wash.
Sieve trays
Sieve trays are simply metal
plates with holes in them. Vapour
passes straight upward through
the liquid on the plate. The
arrangement, number and size of
the holes are design parameters.
PET COKE
54
Delayed Coking
• Heavy feedstock is fed to a fractionator.
• The bottoms of the fractionator are fed to coker drums via a furnace
where the hot material (440°-500°C ) is held approximately 24 hours
(delayed) at pressures of 2-5 bar, until it cracks into lighter products.
• Vapors from the drums are returned to a fractionator where gas,
naphtha, and gas oils are separated out. The heavier hydrocarbons
produced in the fractionator are recycled through the furnace.
• After the coke reaches a predetermined level in one drum, the flow is
diverted to another drum to maintain continuous operation.
• The full drum is steamed to strip out uncracked hydrocarbons, cooled
by water injection, and de-coked by mechanical or hydraulic methods.
• The coke is mechanically removed by an auger rising from the bottom
of the drum. Hydraulic decoking consists of fracturing the coke bed
with high-pressure water ejected from a rotating cutter.
• When hydrocarbons burn they are reacting with oxygen in the air. In
general, the smaller the molecule the better it will mix and then react
with the air.
Small molecules
Big molecules
Medium
molecules
Catalytic
Heat to cracker
Big Molecules
vaporise
Molecules
break up
H H H H H H H H Octane
H C C C C C C C C H
H H H H H H H H
Heat
hexane catalyst
pressure
H H H H H H H H ethene
H C C C C C C H + C C
H H
Ethene
Used as a H H H H H H is used
fuel to make
C8H18 C6H14 + C2H4 plastics
Reactor
65
Fluid Catalytic Cracking
Spent
CoMo catalyst
• When the feedstock has a high paraffinic content, the primary function
of hydrogen is to prevent the formation of polycyclic aromatic
compounds.
• Another important role of hydrogen in the hydrocracking process is to
reduce tar formation and prevent buildup of coke on the catalyst.
• Hydrogenation also serves to convert sulfur and nitrogen compounds
present in the feedstock to hydrogen sulfide and ammonia.
• Hydrocracking produces relatively large amounts of isobutane for
alkylation feedstock and also performs isomerization for pour-point
control and smoke-point control, both of which are important in high-
quality jet fuel.