Refining of Petroleum: Back To Top
Refining of Petroleum: Back To Top
Crude oil and natural gas are extracted from the ground, on land or under
the oceans, by sinking an oil well and are then transported by pipeline
and/or ship to refineries where their components are processed into
refined products. Crude oil and natural gas are of little use in their raw
state; their value lies in what is created from them: fuels, lubricating oils,
waxes, asphalt, petrochemicals and pipeline quality natural gas.
As crude oil comes from the well it contains a mixture of hydrocarbon compounds and relatively small
quantities of other materials such as oxygen, nitrogen, sulphur, salt and water. In the refinery, most of
these non - hydrocarbon substances are removed and the oil is broken down into its various components,
and blended into useful products.
Natural gas from the well, while principally methane, contains quantities of other hydrocarbons - ethane,
propane, butane, pentane and also carbon dioxide and water. These components are separated from the
methane at a gas fractionation plant.
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Paraffins
These consist of straight or branched carbon rings saturated with hydrogen atoms, the simplest of
which is methane (CH4) the main ingredient of natural gas. Others in this group include ethane
(C2H6), and propane (C3H8).
Hydrocarbons
With very few carbon atoms (C1 to C4) are light in density and are gases under normal
atmospheric pressure. Chemically paraffins are very stable compounds.
Naphthenes
Naphthenes consist of carbon rings, sometimes with side chains, saturated with hydrogen atoms.
Naphthenes are chemically stable, they occur naturally in crude oil and have properties similar to
paraffins.
Aromatics
aromatic hydrocarbons are compounds that contain a ring of six carbon atoms with alternating
double and single bonds and six attached hydrogen atoms. This type of structure is known as a
benzene ring. They occur naturally in crude oil, and can also be created by the refining process.
The more carbon atoms a hydrocarbon molecule has, the "heavier" it is (the higher is its molecular
weight) and the higher is its the boiling point.
Small quantities of a crude oil may be composed of compounds containing oxygen, nitrogen, sulphur
and metals. Sulphur content ranges from traces to more than 5 per cent. If a crude oil contains
appreciable quantities of sulphur it is called a sour crude; if it contains little or no sulphur it is called a
sweet crude.
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Every refinery begins with the separation of crude oil into different
fractions by distillation.
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Distillation (Fractionation)
Because crude oil is a mixture of hydrocarbons with different boiling temperatures, it can be separated
by distillation into groups of hydrocarbons that boil between two specified boiling points. Two types of
distillation are performed: atmospheric and vacuum.
Atmospheric distillation takes place in a distilling column at or near atmospheric pressure. The crude
oil is heated to 350 - 400oC and the vapour and liquid are piped into the distilling column. The liquid
falls to the bottom and the vapour rises, passing through a series of perforated trays (sieve trays).
Heavier hydrocarbons condense more quickly and settle on lower trays and lighter hydrocarbons remain
as a vapour longer and condense on higher trays.
Liquid fractions are drawn from the trays and removed. In this way the light gases, methane, ethane,
propane and butane pass out the top of the column, petrol is formed in the top trays, kerosene and gas
oils in the middle, and fuel oils at the bottom. Residue drawn of the bottom may be burned as fuel,
processed into lubricating oils, waxes and bitumen or used as feedstock for cracking units.
To recover additional heavy distillates from this residue, it may be piped to a second distillation column
where the process is repeated under vacuum, called vacuum distillation. This allows heavy
hydrocarbons with boiling points of 450oC and higher to be separated without them partly cracking into
unwanted products such as coke and gas.
The heavy distillates recovered by vacuum distillation can be converted into lubricating oils by a variety
of processes. The most common of these is called solvent extraction. In one version of this process the
heavy distillate is washed with a liquid which does not dissolve in it but which dissolves (and so
extracts) the non-lubricating oil components out of it. Another version uses a liquid which does not
dissolve in it but which causes the non-lubricating oil components to precipitate (as an extract) from it.
Other processes exist which remove impurities by adsorption onto a highly porous solid or which
remove any waxes that may be present by causing them to crystallise and precipitate out.
Reforming
Reforming is a process which uses heat, pressure and a catalyst (usually containing platinum) to bring
about chemical reactions which upgrade naphthas into high octane petrol and petrochemical feedstock.
The naphthas are hydrocarbon mixtures containing many paraffins and naphthenes. In Australia, this
naphtha feedstock comes from the crudes oil distillation or catalytic cracking processes, but overseas it
also comes from thermal cracking and hydrocracking processes. Reforming converts a portion of these
compounds to isoparaffins and aromatics, which are used to blend higher octane petrol.
e.g.
catalyst
heptane -> toluene + hydrogen
C7H16 -> C7H8 + 4H2
catalyst
cyclohexane -> benzene + hydrogen
C6H12 -> C6H6 + 3H2
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Cracking
Cracking processes break down heavier hydrocarbon molecules (high boiling point oils) into lighter
products such as petrol and diesel. These processes include catalytic cracking, thermal cracking and
hydrocracking.
e.g.
A typical reaction:
catalyst
C16H34 -> C8H18 + C8H16
Catalytic cracking is used to convert heavy hydrocarbon fractions obtained by vacuum distillation into
a mixture of more useful products such as petrol and light fuel oil. In this process, the feedstock
undergoes a chemical breakdown, under controlled heat (450 - 500oC) and pressure, in the presence of a
catalyst - a substance which promotes the reaction without itself being chemically changed. Small
pellets of silica - alumina or silica - magnesia have proved to be the most effective catalysts.
The cracking reaction yields petrol, LPG, unsaturated olefin compounds, cracked gas oils, a liquid
residue called cycle oil, light gases and a solid coke residue. Cycle oil is recycled to cause further
breakdown and the coke, which forms a layer on the catalyst, is removed by burning. The other products
are passed through a fractionator to be separated and separately processed.
Fluid catalytic cracking uses a catalyst in the form of a very fine powder which flows like a liquid
when agitated by steam, air or vapour. Feedstock entering the process immediately meets a stream of
very hot catalyst and vaporises. The resulting vapours keep the catalyst fluidised as it passes into the
reactor, where the cracking takes place and where it is fluidised by the hydrocarbon vapour. The catalyst
next passes to a steam stripping section where most of the volatile hydrocarbons are removed. It then
passes to a regenerator vessel where it is fluidised by a mixture of air and the products of combustion
which are produced as the coke on the catalyst is burnt off. The catalyst then flows back to the reactor.
The catalyst thus undergoes a continuous circulation between the reactor, stripper and regenerator
sections.
The catalyst is usually a mixture of aluminium oxide and silica. Most recently, the introduction of
synthetic zeolite catalysts has allowed much shorter reaction times and improved yields and octane
numbers of the cracked gasolines.
Thermal cracking uses heat to break down the residue from vacuum distillation. The lighter elements
produced from this process can be made into distillate fuels and petrol. Cracked gases are converted to
petrol blending components by alkylation or polymerisation. Naphtha is upgraded to high quality petrol
by reforming. Gas oil can be used as diesel fuel or can be converted to petrol by hydrocracking. The
heavy residue is converted into residual oil or coke which is used in the manufacture of electrodes,
graphite and carbides.
Hydrocracking can increase the yield of petrol components, as well as being used to produce light
distillates. It produces no residues, only light oils. Hydrocracking is catalytic cracking in the presence of
hydrogen. The extra hydrogen saturates, or hydrogenates, the chemical bonds of the cracked
hydrocarbons and creates isomers with the desired characteristics. Hydrocracking is also a treating
process, because the hydrogen combines with contaminants such as sulphur and nitrogen, allowing them
to be removed.
Gas oil feed is mixed with hydrogen, heated, and sent to a reactor vessel with a fixed bed catalyst, where
cracking and hydrogenation take place. Products are sent to a fractionator to be separated. The hydrogen
is recycled. Residue from this reaction is mixed again with hydrogen, reheated, and sent to a second
reactor for further cracking under higher temperatures and pressures.
In addition to cracked naphtha for making petrol, hydrocracking yields light gases useful for refinery
fuel, or alkylation as well as components for high quality fuel oils, lube oils and petrochemical
feedstocks.
Following the cracking processes it is necessary to build or rearrange some of the lighter hydrocarbon
molecules into high quality petrol or jet fuel blending components or into petrochemicals. The former
can be achieved by several chemical process such as alkylation and isomerisation.
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Alkylation
Olefins such as propylene and butylene are produced by catalytic and thermal cracking. Alkylation
refers to the chemical bonding of these light molecules with isobutane to form larger branched-chain
molecules (isoparaffins) that make high octane petrol.
Olefins and isobutane are mixed with an acid catalyst and cooled. They react to form alkylate, plus some
normal butane, isobutane and propane. The resulting liquid is neutralised and separated in a series of
distillation columns. Isobutane is recycled as feed and butane and propane sold as liquid petroleum gas
(LPG).
e.g.
catalyst
isobutane + butylene -> isooctane
C4H10 + C4H8 -> C8H18
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Isomerisation
Pentanes and hexanes are the lighter components of petrol. Isomerisation can be used to improve petrol
quality by converting these hydrocarbons to higher octane isomers. The process is the same as for
butane isomerisation.
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Polymerisation
Under pressure and temperature, over an acidic catalyst, light unsaturated hydrocarbon molecules react
and combine with each other to form larger hydrocarbon molecules. Such process can be used to react
butenes (olefin molecules with four carbon atoms) with iso-butane (branched paraffin molecules, or
isoparaffins, with four carbon atoms) to obtain a high octane olefinic petrol blending component called
polymer gasoline.
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A number of contaminants are found in crude oil. As the fractions travel through the refinery processing
units, these impurities can damage the equipment, the catalysts and the quality of the products. There are
also legal limits on the contents of some impurities, like sulphur, in products.
Hydrotreating is one way of removing many of the contaminants from many of the intermediate or final
products. In the hydrotreating process, the entering feedstock is mixed with hydrogen and heated to 300
- 380oC. The oil combined with the hydrogen then enters a reactor loaded with a catalyst which
promotes several reactions:
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The hydrogen sulphide created from hydrotreating is a toxic gas that needs further treatment. The usual
process involves two steps:
the removal of the hydrogen sulphide gas from the hydrocarbon stream
the conversion of hydrogen sulphide to elemental sulphur, a non-toxic and useful chemical.
Solvent extraction, using a solution of diethanolamine (DEA) dissolved in water, is applied to separate
the hydrogen sulphide gas from the process stream. The hydrocarbon gas stream containing the
hydrogen sulphide is bubbled through a solution of diethanolamine solution (DEA) under high pressure,
such that the hydrogen sulphide gas dissolves in the DEA. The DEA and hydrogen mixture is the heated
at a low pressure and the dissolved hydrogen sulphide is released as a concentrated gas stream which is
sent to another plant for conversion into sulphur.
Conversion of the concentrated hydrogen sulphide gas into sulphur occurs in two stages.
1. Combustion of part of the H2S stream in a furnace, producing sulphur dioxide (SO2) water (H2O)
and sulphur (S).
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Air, water and land can all be affected by refinery operations. Refineries are well aware of their
responsibility to the community and employ a variety of processes to safeguard the environment.
The processes described below are those used by the Shell refinery at Geelong in Victoria, but all
refineries employ similar techniques in managing the environmental aspects of refining.
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Air
Preserving air quality around a refinery involves controlling the following emissions:
sulphur oxides
hydrocarbon vapours
smoke
smells
Sulphur enters the refinery in crude oil feed. Gippsland and most other Australian crude oils have a low
sulphur content but other crude's may contain up to 5 per cent sulphur. To deal with this refineries
incorporate a sulphur recovery unit which operates on the principles described above.
Many of the products used in a refinery produce hydrocarbon vapours. The escape of vapours to
atmosphere are prevented by various means. Floating roofs are installed in tanks to prevent evaporation
and so that there is no space for vapour to gather in the tanks. Where floating roofs cannot be used, the
vapours from the tanks are collected in a vapour recovery system and absorbed back into the product
stream. In addition, pumps and valves are routinely checked for vapour emissions and repaired if a
leakage is found.
Smoke is formed when the burning mixture contains insufficient oxygen or is not sufficiently mixed.
Modern furnace control systems prevent this from happening during normal operation.
Smells are the most difficult emission to control and the easiest to detect. Refinery smells are generally
associated with compounds containing sulphur, where even tiny losses are sufficient to cause a
noticeable odour.
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Water
Aqueous effluent's consist of cooling water, surface water and process water.
The majority of the water discharged from the refinery has been used for cooling the various process
streams. The cooling water does not actually come into contact with the process material and so has very
little contamination. The cooling water passes through large "interceptors" which separate any oil from
minute leaks etc., prior to discharge. The cooling water system at Geelong Refinery is a once-through
system with no recirculation.
Rainwater falling on the refinery site must be treated before discharge to ensure no oily material washed
off process equipment leaves the refinery. This is done first by passing the water through smaller "plant
oil catchers", which each treat rainwater from separate areas on the site, and then all the streams pass to
large "interceptors" similar to those used for cooling water. The rainwater from the production areas is
further treated in a Dissolved Air Flotation (DAF) unit. This unit cleans the water by using a flocculation
agent to collect any remaining particles or oil droplets and floating the resulting flock to the surface with
millions of tiny air bubbles. At the surface the flock is skimmed off and the clean water discharged.
Process water has actually come into contact with the process streams and so can contain significant
contamination. This water is treated in the "sour water treater" where the contaminants (mostly ammonia
and hydrogen sulphide) are removed and then recovered or destroyed in a downstream plant. The
process water, when treated in this way, can be reused in parts of the refinery and discharged through the
process area rainwater treatment system and the DAF unit.
Any treated process water that is not reused is discharged as Trade Waste to the sewerage system. This
trade waste also includes the effluent from the refinery sewage treatment plant and a portion of treated
water from the DAF unit.
As most refineries import and export many feed materials and products by ship, the refinery and harbour
authorities are prepared for spillage from the ship or pier. In the event of such a spill, equipment is
always on standby at the refinery and it is supported by the facilities of the Australian Marine Oil Spill
Centre at Geelong, Victoria.
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Land
The refinery safeguards the land environment by ensuring the appropriate disposal of all wastes.
Within the refinery, all hydrocarbon wastes are recycled through the refinery slops system. This system
consists of a network of collection pipes and a series of dewatering tanks. The recovered hydrocarbon is
reprocessed through the distillation units.
Wastes that cannot be reprocessed are either recycled to manufacturers (e.g. some spent catalysts can be
reprocessed), disposed of in EPA-approved facilities off-site, or chemically treated on-site to form inert
materials which can be disposed to land-fill within the refinery.
Waste movements within the refinery require a "Process liquid, Sludge and Solid waste disposal
permit". Wastes that go off-site must have an EPA "Waste Transport Permit".
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