Coking and Thermal Process
Coking and Thermal Process
The bottom of the barrel has become more of a problem for refiners because
heavier crudes are being processed and the market for heavy residual fuel oils
has been decreasing. Historically, the heavy residual fuel oils have been burned
to produce electric power and to supply the energy needs of heavy industry, but
more severe environmental restrictions have caused many of these users to switch
to natural gas. Thus when more heavy residuals are in the crude there is more
difficulty in economically disposing of them. Coking units convert heavy feedstocks into a solid coke and lower boiling hydrocarbon products which are suitable as feedstocks to other refinery units for conversion into higher value transportation fuels.
From a chemical reaction viewpoint, coking can be considered as a severe
thermal cracking process in which one of the end products is carbon (i.e., coke).
Actually the coke formed contains some volatile matter or high-boiling hydrocarbons. To eliminate essentially all volatile matter from petroleum coke it must be
calcined at approximately 2000 to 2300F (1095 to 1260C). Minor amounts of
hydrogen remain in the coke even after calcining, which gives rise to the theory
held by some authors that the coke is actually a polymer.
Coking was used primarily to pretreat vacuum residuals to prepare coker
gas oil streams suitable for feed to a catalytic cracker. This reduced coke formation on the cracker catalyst and thereby allowed increased cracker throughputs.
This also reduced the net refinery yield of low-priced residual fuel. Added benefit
was obtained by reducing the metals content of the catalytic cracker feed stocks.
In recent years coking has also been used to prepare hydrocracker feedstocks and to produce a high quality needle coke from stocks such as heavy
catalytic gas oils and decanted oils from the fluid catalytic cracking unit [19,20].
Coal tar pitch is also processed in delayed coking units [16].
Delayed coking is described in Sections 5.2 to 5.7. This is the most widely
used coking process. Fluid coking and Flexicoking are described in Sections 5.7
to 5.10. These fluid bed processes have been under development by Exxon over
the past 40 years and are now commercially operated in several refineries around
the world [17,20].
Table 5.1
Process
Coke type
Delayed
Sponge
Shot
Needle
Fluid
Fluid
Flexicoker
Flexicoke
Characteristics
Spongelike appearance
Higher surface area
Lower contaminants level
Higher volatile content
Higher HGI a (100 [22])
Typical size of 06 in. (015 cm)
Spherical appearance
Lower surface area
Lower volatiles
Lower HGI a (50)
Tends to agglomerate
Needlelike appearance
Low volatiles
High carbon content
Low volatiles
Higher contaminants level
Low HGI a (40)
Black sandlike particles
Highest metals level
80% 200 mesh
Coke type
Carbon source
Needle
Calcined
Sponge
Calcined
Sponge
Green
Sponge
Sponge
Shot
Fluid
Flexicoke
Green lump
Green
Green
Green
Green
Fuel use
Source: Ref. 5.
State
End use
Electrodes
Synthetic graphite
Aluminum anodes
TiO 2 pigments
Carbon raiser
Silicon carbide
Foundries
Coke ovens
Space heating in Europe/Japan
Industrial boilers
Utilities
Cogeneration
Lime
Cement
Table 5.3
Calcined coke
Moisture, wt%
Volatile matter, wt%
Sulfur, wt%
Metals, ppm
V
Ni
Si
Fe
Density, g/cc
200 Mesh RD
VBD
CTE, 1/C 107
Water
Volatile matter
Fixed carbon
Ash
Sponge
anodes
Needle
electrodes
0.5
0.5
3.0
0.5
1.5
350
300
150
270
2.042.08
0.80
40
2.12
As produced
(wt%)
After calcining
(wt%)
24
710
8591
0.51.0
23
95
12
4.0
The sulfur content of petroleum coke varies with the sulfur content of the
coker feedstock. It is usually in the range of 0.3 to 1.5 wt%. It can sometimes,
however, be as high as 8%. The sulfur content is not significantly reduced by
calcining.
Figure 5.1
for the coking to take place before subsequent processing, hence the term delayed coking.
Typically furnace outlet temperatures range from 900930F (482500C).
The higher the outlet temperature, the greater the tendency to produce shot coke
and the shorter the time before the furnace tubes have to be decoked. Usually
furnace tubes have to be decoked every three to five months.
Hot fresh liquid feed is charged to the fractionator two to four trays above
the bottom vapor zone. This accomplishes the following:
1. The hot vapors from the coke drum are quenched by the cooler feed
liquid thus preventing any significant amount of coke formation in the
fractionator and simultaneously condensing a portion of the heavy ends
which are recycled.
2. Any remaining material lighter than the desired coke drum feed is
stripped (vaporized) from the fresh liquid feed.
3. The fresh feed liquid is further preheated making the process more
energy efficient.
Vapors from the top of the coke drum return to the base of the fractionator.
These vapors consist of steam and the products of the thermal cracking reaction:
gas, naphtha, and gas oils. The vapors flow up through the quench trays previously described. Above the fresh feed entry in the fractionator there are usually
two or three additional trays below the gas oil drawoff tray. These trays are
refluxed with partially cooled gas oil in order to provide fine trim control of the
gas oil end point and to minimize entrainment of any fresh feed liquid or recycle
liquid into the gas oil product.
The gas oil side draw is a conventional configuration employing a six- to
eight-tray stripper with steam introduced under the bottom tray for vaporization
of light ends to control the initial boiling point (IBP) of the gas oil.
Steam and vaporized light ends are returned from the top of the gas oil
stripper to the fractionator one or two trays above the draw tray. A pump-around
reflux system is provided at the draw tray to recover heat at a high temperature
level and minimize the low-temperature-level heat removed by the overhead condenser. This low-temperature-level heat cannot normally be recovered by heat
exchange and is rejected to the atmosphere through a water cooling tower or
aerial coolers.
Eight to ten trays are generally used between the gas-oil draw and the naphtha draw or column top. If a naphtha side draw is employed, additional trays are
required above the naphtha draw tray.
Major design criteria for coking units are described in the literature [12,18].
Operation
Fill drum with coke
Switch and steam out
Cool
Drain
Unhead and decoke
Hours
24
3
3
2
5
Operation
Hours
2
7
2
48
Gas yield
Naphtha yield
Coke yield
Gas oil yield
Gas oil EP
Gas oil metals
content
Coke metals
content
Recycle quantity
a
Fractionator
pressure
Feed
carbon
residueb
Hat
temp.a
Hat temperature is the temperature of the vapors rising to the gas oil drawoff tray in the fractionator.
Carbon residue is that determined by Conradson residue test procedure (ASTM).
c
For these items, the heater outlet temperature and the carbon residue, per se, do not have a significant
independent effect.
b
1.
2.
3.
4.
are the heater outlet temperature, the fractionator pressure, the temperature of
the vapors rising to the gas oil drawoff tray, and the free carbon content of
the feed as determined by the Conradson or Ramsbottom carbon tests. As would
be expected, high heater outlet temperatures increase the cracking and coking
reactions, thus increasing yields of gas, naphtha, and coke and decreasing the
yield of gas oil. An increase in fractionator pressure has the same effect as an
increase in the heater outlet temperature. This is due to the fact that more recycle
is condensed in the fractionator and returned to the heater and coke drums. The
temperature of the vapors rising to the gas oil drawoff tray is controlled to produce
the desired gas oil end point. If this temperature is increased more heavies will
be drawn off in the gas oil leaving less material to be recycled to the furnace.
Figure 5.2 Delayed coking units investment cost1999 U.S. Gulf Coast. (See
Table 5.10.)
mol%
Methane
Ethene
Ethane
Propene
Propane
Butenm
i-Butane
n-Butane
H2
CO 2
Total
51.4
1.5
15.9
3.1
8.2
2.4
1.0
2.6
13.7
0.2
100.0
Note: MW 22.12.
The naphtha or gasoline fraction may be split into light and heavy cuts.
After hydrotreating for sulfur removal and olefin saturation, the light cut is either
isomerized to improve octane or blended directly into finished gasoline. The
heavy cut is hydrotreated and reformed. A typical split of coker naphtha is as
follows:
Light naphtha 35.1 vol%, 65API
Heavy naphtha 64.9 vol%, 50API
Gas
Light naphtha
Heavy naphtha
LCGO
HCGO
Coke
Total
Sulfur (%)
Nitrogen (%)
30
1.7
3.3
15.4
19.6
30
100
1
2
22
75
100
The gas-oil fraction is usually split into a light and heavy cut before further
processing. The light fraction may be hydrotreated and subsequently fed to a
FCC. The heavy fraction may be used as heavy fuel or sent to the vacuum distillation unit. An approximate split of the coker gas oil can be estimated from the
following:
Light gas oil (LCGO) 67.3 vol%, 30API
Heavy gas oil (HCGO) 32.7 vol%, 13API
These yield data have been developed from correlations of actual plant
operating data and pilot plant data. Values calculated from these equations are
sufficiently accurate for primary economic evaluation studies (see Table 5.5 for
calculating yields when the Conradson carbon Figure is known); however, for
the actual design of a specific coking unit the yields should be determined by
the pilot plant operation. In all cases, the weight and volume percents given are
based on the net fresh feed to the coking unit and are limited to feedstocks having
gravities of less than 18API. The yields shown will vary significantly if the
coker feed is derived from material other than straight-run crude residuals. The
numerical values in the equations do not represent a high degree of accuracy but
are included for the purpose of establishing a complete weight balance.
Typical gas compositions and sulfur and nitrogen distributions in products
produced by delayed coking of reduced crudes are given in Tables 5.6 and 5.7.
The 1999 installed costs for delayed cokers in the Gulf Coast section of the
United States are given by Figure 5.2. Tables 5.8 and 5.9 give data for typical gas
composition and sulfur and nitrogen distribution for delayed coking, respectively.
Table 5.10 gives utility requirements for delayed coker operation.
Figure 5.3
Coke flows from the reactor to the heater where it is reheated to about 1100F
(593C). The coke heater is also a fluidized bed and its primary function is to
transfer heat from the gasifier to the reactor.
Coke flows from the coke heater to a third fluidized bed in the gasifier
where it is reacted with air and steam to produce a fuel gas product consisting
of CO, H 2 , CO 2 , and N 2 . Sulfur in the coke is converted primarily to H 2 S, plus
a small amount of COS, and nitrogen in the coke is converted to NH 3 and N 2 .
This gas flows from the top of the gasifier to the bottom of the heater where it
serves to fluidize the heater bed and provide the heat needed in the reactor. The
reactor heat requirement is supplied by recirculating hot coke from the gasifier
to the heater.
The system can be designed and operated to gasify about 60 to 97% of the
coke product in the reactor. The overall coke inventory in the system is maintained by withdrawing a stream of purge coke from the heater.
The coke gas leaving the heater is cooled in a waste heat steam generator
before passing through external cyclones and a venturi-type wet scrubber. The
coke fines collected in the venturi scrubber plus the purge coke from the heater
represent the net coke yield and contain essentially all of the metal and ash components of the reactor feed stock.
After removal of entrained coke fines the coke gas is treated for removal
of hydrogen sulfide in a Stretford unit and then used for refinery fuel. The treated
fuel gas has a much lower heating value than natural gas (100 to 130 Btu/scf
vs. 900 to 1000 But/scf) and therefore modifications of boilers and furnaces may
be required for efficient combustion of this gas.
4.9
5.4
0.26
23.3
32
86
30
Yields
Delayed
coking
Recycle cut point, F VT
Yields on Fresh Feed, wt%
Gas
Light naphtha
Heavy naphtha
Gas oil
Gross coke
Total
Net coke
C 5 Liquid
Fluid
coking
Flexicoking
900
975
975
9.3
2.0
8.0
46.7
34.0
100.0
11.8
1.9
7.8
50.4
28.1
100.0
11.8
1.9
7.8
50.4
28.1
100.0
34.0
56.7
22.4
60.1
2.3
60.1
Component
H2
CO
CH 4
CO 2
N2
Total
Mol%
15
20
2
10
53
100
This composition is on a dry basis. The coke gas as actually produced from the
H 2 S removal step is water saturated, which means it contains typically 5 to 6
mol% water vapor.
Assuming that the coke is about 98 wt% carbon on a sulfur-free and ashfree basis, the calculated amount of coke gas produced having the above composition is 194 Mscf per ton of coke gasified. Combustion of this gas results in production of about 80% of the equivalent coke heating value. Recovery of sensible
heat from the coke gas leaving the coke heater increases the recoverable heat to
about 85% of the equivalent coke heating value.
5.8 VISBREAKING
Visbreaking is a relatively mild thermal cracking operation mainly used to reduce
the viscosities and pour points of vacuum tower bottoms to meet No. 6 fuel oil
specifications or to reduce the amount of cutting stock required to dilute the resid
to meet these specifications. Refinery production of heavy fuel oils can be reduced
from 2035% and cutter stock requirements from 2030% by visbreaking. The
gas oil fraction produced by visbreaking is also used to increase cat cracker feed
stocks and increase gasoline yields.
Long paraffinic side chains attached to aromatic rings are the primary cause
of high pour points and viscosities for paraffinic base residua. Visbreaking is
carried out at conditions to optimize the breaking off of these long side chains
and their subsequent cracking to shorter molecules with lower viscosities and
pour points. The amount of cracking is limited, however, because if the operation
is too severe, the resulting product becomes unstable and forms polymerization
products during storage which cause filter plugging and sludge formation. The
objective is to reduce the viscosity as much as possible without significantly
affecting the fuel stability. For most feedstocks, this reduces the severity to the
production of less than 10% gasoline and lighter materials.
The degree of viscosity and pour point reduction is a function of the composition of the residua feed to the visbreaker. Waxy feed stocks achieve pour point
reductions from 1535F (3 to 2C) and final viscosities from 2575% of the
feed. High asphaltene content in the feed reduces the conversion ratio at which
a stable fuel can be made [15], which results in smaller changes in the properties.
The properties of the cutter stocks used to blend with the visbreaker tars also
have an effect on the severity of the visbreaker operation. Aromatic cutter stocks,
such as catalytic gas oils, have a favorable effect on fuel stability and permit
higher visbreaker conversion levels before reaching fuel stability limitations [17].
The molecular structures of the compounds in petroleum which have boiling points above 1000F (538C) are highly complex and historically have been
classified arbitrarily as oils, resins, and asphaltenes according to solubility in light
paraffinic hydrocarbons. The oil fraction is soluble in propane the resin fraction
is soluble (and the asphaltene fraction insoluble) in either pentane, hexane, nheptane, or octane, depending upon the investigator. Usually either pentane or
n-heptane is used. The solvent selected does have an effect on the amounts and
properties of the fractions obtained, but normally little distinction is made in
terminology. Chapter 9 (Catalytic Hydrocracking and Hydrocracking and Hydroprocessing) contains a more detailed discussion of the properties of these fractions.
Many investigators believe the asphaltenes are not in solution in the oil
and resins, but are very small, perhaps molecular size, solids held in suspension
by the resins, and there is a definite critical ratio of resins to asphaltenes below
which the asphaltenes will start to precipitate. During the cracking phase some
of the resins are cracked to lighter hydrocarbons and others are converted to
asphaltenes. Both reactions affect the resinasphaltene ratio and the resultant
stability of the visbreaker tar product and serve to limit the severity of the operation.
The principal reactions [17] which occur during the visbreaking operation
are:
1
2
4
8
485
470
455
440
905
878
850
825
Source: Ref. 3.
Process flow diagrams are shown in Figures 5.4 and 5.5. The feed is introduced into the furnace and heated to the desired temperature. In the furnace or
coil cracking process the feed is heated to cracking temperature [885930F
(474500C)] and quenched as it exits the furnace with gas oil or tower bottoms
to stop the cracking reaction. In the soaker cracking operation, the feed leaves
the furnace between 800 and 820F (427438C) and passes through a soaking
drum, which provides the additional reaction time, before it is quenched. Pressure
is an important design and operating parameter with units being designed for
pressures as high as 750 psig (5170 kPa) for liquid-phase visbreaking and as low
as 100300 psig (6902070 kPa) for 2040% vaporization at the furnace outlet
[8]. Typical yields and product properties from visbreaking operations are shown
in Tables 5.13 and 5.14.
For furnace cracking, fuel consumption accounts for about 80% of the operating cost with a net fuel consumption equivalent of 11.5 wt% on feed. Fuel
requirements for soaker visbreaking are about 3035% lower [3]. (See Table
5.15.)
Many of the properties of the products of visbreaking vary with conversion
and the characteristics of the feedstocks. However, some properties, such as diesel
index and octane number, are more closely related to feed qualities; and others,
such as density and viscosity of the gas oil, are relatively independent of both
conversion and feedstock characteristics [16].
Figure 5.5
Soaker visbreaker.
Product
2.5
5.9
13.5
78.1
65.0
1.0
32.0
2.5
14.4
4.1
720
11.0
4.3
250
Product
2.4
4.6
14.5
78.5
32.2
8.2
100,000
5.5
45,000
Coil
Soaker
900 (480)
1.0
1.0
805 (430)
0.85
0.90
Table 5.16 Delayed Coker Material Balance: 100,000 BPCD Alaska North Slope
Crude Oil Basis
Component
vol%
BPD
API
(lb/hr)/BPD
lb/hr
wt% S
lb/hr S
Feed
1050 VRC
PCC HGO
Alky Tar
Total
88.4
11.5
0.1
100.0
18,003
2,338
25
20,366
8.7
0.6
14.72
15.75
2.17
0.32
5,757
117
7.4
14.85
265,162
36,820
468
302,450
1.94
5,875
(22.7)
7.6
14.1
37.3
20.1
(22.7)
1,551
2,868
7,587
4,103
65.0
50.1
30.0
14.3
10.51
11.36
12.78
14.16
29,776
16,303
32,575
96,967
58,114
68,717
302,450
5.92
0.36
0.72
0.93
1.98
2.56
1,762
59
235
905
1,151
1,762
5,875
Products
Gas (C 4), wt%
Light naphtha
Heavy naphtha
LCGO
HCGO
Coke, wt%
Total
16,110
lytic cracking unit (HGO) and the alkylation unit (tar) are sent to the delayed
coker for processing. These streams are included in the feed to coker in this
problem.
Calculations of yields:
Coke 1.6 (14.2) 22.72 wt%.
Gas (C 4) 7.8 0.144 (14.2) 9.84 wt%.
Naphtha 11.29 0.343 (14.2) 16.16 wt%.
Naphtha [186.5/(131.5 7.4)](16.16) 21.7 vol%.
Gas oil 100.0 (22.7 9.8 16.2) 51.3 wt%.
Gas oil [(155.5/138.9)](51.3) 57.4 vol%.
Sulfur distribution is obtained from Table 5.9 and gas (C 4) composition from
Table 5.8.
577
25
990
2851
mol%
mol/hr
C1
C2
C2
C3
C3
C4
i-C 4
n-C 4
H2
CO 2
51.4
1.5
15.9
3.1
8.2
2.4
1.0
2.6
13.7
0.2
100.0
650.9
19.0
201.4
39.3
103.8
30.4
12.7
32.9
173.5
2.5
1226.4
It is now necessary to adjust this gas composition to allow for the sulfur
content. In actual operations some of the sulfur will be combined as mercaptan
molecules (R-S-H) but for preliminary calculations it is sufficiently accurate to
assume that all the sulfur in the gas fraction is combined as H 2 S. Since there are
1758 lb/hr of sulfur (equivalent to 54.8 mol/hr), the free hydrogen must be reduced by 54.8 mol/hr so the final coker gas balance is as follows:
Component
mol/hr
MW
lb/hr
C1
C2
C2
C3
C3
C4
iC 4
nC 4
H2
CO 2
H2S
Total
650.9
19.0
201.4
39.3
103.8
30.4
12.7
32.9
118.5
2.5
55.1
1,266.4
16
28
30
42
44
56
58
58
2
44
34
10,415
532
6,041
1,649
4,569
1,702
735
1,910
237
111
1,873
29,773
(lb/hr)/BPD
7.61
7.42
8.76
8.22
8.51
BPD
217
616
194
89
224
1,341
PROBLEMS
1. For the crude oil in Figures 3.5 and 3.9 estimate the Conradson carbon
of the 1050F (566C) residual crude oil fraction.
2. Estimate the coke yields for the crude oil fraction of problem 1 and
make a material balance around the delayed coking unit. The 1050F
(566C) fraction contains 0.38% sulfur by weight.
3. Using the information from problem 2, estimate the capital cost of a
7500 BPSD delayed coking unit and its utility requirements.
4. Using Bureau of Mines distillation data from Appendix C, calculate
the coke yield and make a material balance from a Torrence Field,
California crude oil residuum having an API gravity of 23.8 and a
sulfur content of 1.84 wt%.
5. Estimate the capital and operating costs for a 10,000 BPSD delayed
coker processing the reduced crude of problem 4. Assume four workers
per shift at an average of $20.50/hr per worker.
6. Calculate the long tons per day of coke produced by charging 30,000
barrels of 1050F (566C) residuum from the assigned crude oil to
a delayed coking unit.
7. If 95% of the hydrogen sulfide present in the coker gas product stream
can be converted to elemental sulfur, how many long tons of sulfur
will be produced per day when charging 30,000 barrels of 1050F
(566C) residuum from the assigned crude oil to the delayed coker?
8. Make a material balance around the delayed coker for the charge rate
and the crude oil of problems 6 and 7. Also estimate the utility requirements.
9. Estimate the capital and operating costs for a 30,000 BPSD delayed
coker processing the assigned reduced crude. Assume four workers per
shift at an average of $20.50/hr per worker.
NOTES
1. D. E. Allan et al., Chem. Engr. Prog. 77(12), 40 (1981).
2. D. E. Allan, C. H. Martinez, C. C. Eng, and W. J. Barton, Chem. Engr. Prog. 79(1),
8589 (1983).
3. M. Akbar and H. Geelen, Hydro. Proc. 60(5), 8185 (1981).
4. Anon., Hydro. Proc. 47(9), 152 (1968).
5. R. E. Dymond, Hydro. Proc. 70(9), 162C162J (1991).
6. J. D. Elliott, Hydro. Proc. 71(1), 7584 (1992).
7. J. H. Eppard, Petrol. Refiner, p. 98 (July 1953).
8. R. Hournac, J. Kuhn, and M. Notarbartolo, Hydro. Proc. 58(12), 97102 (1979).
9. M. Hus, Oil Gas J. 79(15), 109120 (1981).
10. N. P. Lieberman, Oil Gas J. 87(13), 6769 (1989).
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
ADDITIONAL READING
24. E. Stolfa, Hydro. Proc. 59(5), 101109 (1980).
25. T. A. Cooper and W. P. Ballard, Advances in Petroleum Chemistry and Refining,
Vol. 6, pp. 171238 (1962).
26. A. N. Sachanen, Conversion of Petroleum: Production of Motor Fuels by Thermal
and Catalytic Processes, 2nd Ed. (Reinhold Publishing Corp., New York, 1948).
27. H. M. Feintuch and K. M. Negin, in Handbook of Petroleum Refining Processes,
2nd Ed., R. A. Meyers, Ed., 12.2512.82, (McGraw-Hill, New York, 1997).