Chapter 2
Chapter 2
PETROCHEMISTRY FEEDSTOCKS
1. Steam cracking
Ethylene
Heavy hydrocarbons B, T, X
To: high
P: low
•
R-CH2-CH2-CH2-R R-CH2-CH2-CH2• + R
Instructor: DAO THI KIM THOA • •
R-CH2-CH2-CH2 R-CH2 + CH2=CH2
time. Light hydrocarbon feeds (such as ethane, LPGs or light naphtha) give product reactor walls. This degrades the efficiency of the reactor, so reaction conditions are
streams rich in the lighter alkenes, including ethylene, propylene, and butadiene. designed to minimize this. Nonetheless, a steam cracking furnace can usually only
Heavier hydrocarbon (full range & heavy naphtha as well as other refinery run for a few months at a time between de-cokings. Decokes require the furnace to
products) feeds give some of these, but also give products rich in aromatic be isolated from the process and then a flow of steam or a steam/air mixture is
hydrocarbons and hydrocarbons suitable for inclusion in gasoline or fuel oil. The passed through the furnace coils at 950 -1050 oC . This converts the hard solid
higher cracking temperature (also referred to as severity) favors the production of carbon layer to Carbon Monoxide and Carbon Dioxide. Once this reaction is
ethene and benzene, whereas lower severity produces relatively higher amounts of complete, the furnace can be returned to service.
propene, C4-hydrocarbons and liquid products.
• Cracking n-paraffin: C17 – C34 paraffin to give straight a-olefin (C6 – C9, C10
– C13, C14 – C18 used in plasticsizer, surfactant).
• Dehydrogenation n-paraffin.
Fluid catalytic cracking, developed by American engineers Warren K. Lewis and Edwin
R. Gilliand is a commonly used process and a modern oil refinery will typically include
a cat cracker, particularly at refineries in the USA due to the high demand for gasoline.
The process was first used in around 1942, and employs a powdered catalyst. During
the Second World War, it provided Allied Forces with plentiful supplies of gasoline and
Catalytic Cracking takes long molecules and breaks them into much smaller artificial rubber that contrasted with the penury suffered by the Axis Forces. Initial
molecules. The cracking reaction is very endothermic, and requires a large process implementations were based on a low activity alumina catalyst and a reactor
amount of heat. Another problem is that reaction quickly fouls the Silica (SiO2) where the catalyst particles were suspended in a rising flow of feed hydrocarbons in a
and alumina (Al2O3) catalyst by forming coke on its surface. However, by using a fluidized bed. Alumina-catalyzed cracking systems are still in use in high school and
fluidized bed to slowly carry the catalyst upwards, and then sending it to a university laboratories in experiments concerning alkanes and alkenes. The catalyst is
regenerator where the coke can be burned off, the catalyst is continuously usually obtained by crushing pumice stones, which contain mainly aluminium oxide
regenerated. This system has the additional benefit of using the large amounts of
and silicon (IV) oxide into small, porous pieces. In the laboratory, Aluminum oxide (or
heat liberated in the exothermic regeneration reaction to heat the cracking
porous pot) must be heated.
reactor. The FCC system is a brilliant reaction scheme, which turns two negatives
(heating and fouling) into a positive, thereby making the process extremely
economical.
During the trip up the riser, the cracking catalyst is "spent" by reactions which deposit
coke on the catalyst and greatly reduce activity and selectivity. The "spent" catalyst is
In newer designs, cracking takes place using a very active zeolite-based catalyst in a disengaged from the cracked hydrocarbon vapors and sent to a stripper where it is
short-contact time vertical or upward sloped pipe called the "riser". Pre-heated feed is contacted with steam to remove hydrocarbons remaining in the catalyst pores. The
sprayed into the base of the riser via feed nozzles where it contacts extremely hot "spent" catalyst then flows into a fluidized-bed regenerator where air (or in some cases
fluidized catalyst at 1230 to 1400 °F (665 to 760 oC). The hot catalyst vaporizes the air plus oxygen) is used to burn off the coke to restore catalyst activity and also provide
feed and catalyzes the cracking reactions that break down the high molecular weight oil the necessary heat for the next reaction cycle, cracking being an endothermic reaction.
into lighter components including LPG, gasoline, and diesel. The catalyst-hydrocarbon The "regenerated" catalyst then flows to the base of the riser, repeating the cycle.
mixture flows upward through the riser for just a few seconds and then the mixture is The gasoline produced in the FCC unit has an elevated octane rating but is less
separated via cyclones. The catalyst-free hydrocarbons are routed to a main fractionator chemically stable compared to other gasoline components due to its olefinic profile.
for separation into fuel gas, LPG, gasoline, light cycle oils used in diesel and jet fuel, Olefins in gasoline are responsible for the formation of polymeric deposits in storage
and heavy fuel oil. tanks, fuel ducts and injectors. The FCC LPG is an important source of C3-C4 olefins
and isobutane that are essential feeds for the alkylation process and the production of
polymers such as polypropylene.
Recycled H2
Dehydrogenation is endothermic: needed
to be reheat after reactor 1 and 2
catalyst
catalyst
catalyst
naphtha
To: 500 – 525oC
Hydrogen
heater reactors separator stabilizer
Recognize the correlation between the size of reactors and the retention time of those reactions.
Steam reforming
Steam reforming of natural gas, sometimes referred to as steam methane reforming (SMR) is This SMR process is quite different from and not to be confused with catalytic
the most common method of producing commercial bulk hydrogen as well as the hydrogen used reforming of naphtha, an oil refinery process that also produces significant amounts of
in the industrial synthesis of ammonia. It is also the least expensive method. At high temperatures hydrogen along with high octane gasoline.
(700 – 1100 °C) and in the presence of a metal-based catalyst, steam reacts with methane to yield A great deal of ethylene is produced by a non-catalytic process called “steam
carbon monoxide and hydrogen. cracking” which cracks (i.e., reforms) large hydrocarbon molecules into smaller
CH4 + H2O → CO + 3 H2 molecules). In the year 2003, there was 97,000,000 metric tons of ethylene (used to
The United States produces nine million tons of hydrogen per year, mostly with steam reforming
produce polyethylene and a host of other petrochemical chemicals) manufactured
of natural gas. The worldwide ammonia production, using hydrogen derived from steam
worldwide by the steam cracking of various hydrocarbons (methane, ethane, LPG,
reforming, was 109 million metric tonnes in 2004 (*).
naphtha, and fuel oils).
(*): Wikipedia
Purpose: produce (CO + H2)
Feed: natural gas, distillates
Catalyst: activated Ni
Steam/natural gas = 4 - 5