Fundamentals of Oil Refinery
Fundamentals of Oil Refinery
Fundamentals of Oil Refinery
We need to refine the crude oil because Crude oil is an unstable mixture of several hydrocarbons in varying quantities according to the density of the products There is not one type of crude oil but a multitude of different crudes Different crudes contain dissolved gases, sulfur or acid products which are very corrosive for metals
That is why the crude oils must be purified and transformed into products having an almost constant composition, well adapted to their use. These transformations are carried out in refineries. Lets learn more about the refining and refineries
A refinery is a factory. Just as a paper mill turns lumber into paper, a refinery takes crude oil and turns it into gasoline and hundreds of other useful products. A typical refinery costs billions of dollars to build and millions more to maintain A refinery runs twenty-four hours a day, 365 days a year and requires a large number of employees to run. A refinery can occupy as much land as several hundred football fields. Workers ride bicycles to move from place to place inside the complex. Typical refinery products are LPG, Gasoline, Kerosene, Diesel, Fuel oil, Lubricating oil, Paraffin wax, Asphalt and Tar Petroleum is also the raw material for products such as fertilizers, pesticides, plastics and other polymers which are used in the manufacturing of fabrics such as silk.
Crude Oil
Primary Processing
Raw Products
Secondary Processing
Commercial Products
Separation
Conversion
Primary Processing-Separation
Primary processing involves distillation at atmospheric pressure or under vacuum. Distillation causes separation of breaking up of crude oil into various petrochemicals.
Inside the towers, the liquids and vapors separate into components or fractions according to weight and boiling point. The lightest fractions, including gasoline and liquid petroleum gas (LPG), vaporize and rise to the top of the tower, where they condense back to liquids. Medium weight liquids, including kerosene and diesel oil distillates, stay in the middle. (Heavier liquids, called gas oils, separate lower down, while the heaviest fractions with the highest boiling points settle at the bottom.)
Distillation is done using two methods; a) Atmospheric distillation b) Vacuum Distillation Source- http://www.eia.doe.gov/kids/energyfacts/sources/non-renewable/refinery.html
Secondary Processing-Conversion
Primary products require further adjustment of chemical composition in order to become suitable for sale or petrochemical processing. This transformation takes place during conversion stage. The most widely used conversion method is called cracking because it uses heat and pressure to "crack" heavy hydrocarbon molecules into lighter ones. A cracking unit consists of one or more tall, thick-walled, bullet-shaped reactors and a network of furnaces, heat exchangers and other vessels.
Conversion is directed towards maximum gasoline production
Cracking unit
Cracking is not the only form of conversion. Other refinery processes, instead of splitting molecules, rearrange them to add value. Alkylations, for example, makes gasoline components by combining some of the gaseous byproducts of cracking. The process, which essentially is cracking in reverse, takes place in a series of large, horizontal vessels and tall, skinny towers that loom above other refinery structures. Reforming uses heat, moderate pressure and catalysts to turn naphtha, a light, relatively low-value fraction, into high-octane gasoline components. Well learn more about these processes
Source- http://www.eia.doe.gov/kids/energyfacts/sources/non-renewable/refinery.html
Secondary Processing-Conversion
Some of the conversion processes are shown below
VISBREAKING
A mild form of thermal cracking, significantly lowers the viscosity of heavy crude-oil residue without affecting the boiling point range. oil is cracked in the presence of a finely divided catalyst which is maintained in an aerated or fluidized state by the oil vapors.
HYDROCRACKING
Hydrocracking is a two-stage process combining catalytic cracking and hydrogenation, wherein heavier feedstocks are cracked in the presence of hydrogen to produce more desirable products. The heated charge (typically residuum from atmospheric distillation towers) is transferred to large coke drums which provide the long residence time needed to allow the cracking reactions to proceed to completion.
DELAYED COKING
Dont be surprised to know that a barrel of crude oil after refining will provide slightly more than 1 barrel of petroleum products. This gain from processing the crude oil is similar to what happens to popcorn, it gets bigger after it is popped.
If you are still wondering how much of what is produced here is a general breakup of the quantity of petroleum products produced in a refinery. However the product mix can be changed as needed. For example, the same barrel can be processed to yield more heating oil in winter. However that would also mean something else will be produced less.
Source- http://www.eia.doe.gov/kids/energyfacts/sources/non-renewable/oil.html#How%20used
Exercise
Find the best match of terms in column A & B
A
Jamnagar LPG & Naptha
Answer
Biggest refinery in India
B
First refinery in India
Petroleum byproducts
Impurity
Conversion Process
Commercial Products