Shell & Tube
Shell & Tube
Early Refining
Natural Gas is a mixture of very low boiling hydrocarbons. Natural gas can only be
liquefied under extremely high pressures and very low temperatures. It is called "dry"
when methane (CH4) is the primary component, and "wet" if it contains higher boiling
hydrocarbons. If it smells bad, because of sulfur compounds, it is called "sour". Otherwise,
it is called "sweet".
Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) is a very light fraction of petroleum. It is also a fairly
simple fraction containing mainly propane and butane
Gasoline is a light fraction of petroleum which is quite volatile and burns rapidly. Straight
run gasoline refers to gasoline produced by distillation instead of cracking, although it
really doesn't make a difference. Gasoline is often just called "gas", however it is a liquid
at typical pressure
Naphtha is a light fraction of petroleum used to make gasoline. Naphtha also produces
solvents and feedstock for the petrochemical industry.
A Few Terms
Kerosene was the first important petroleum fraction, replacing whale oils in lamps over a
hundred years ago. Some unscrupulous refiners failed to distill off all the naphtha from the
kerosene fraction thereby increasing the volume of their final product. This lead to many
lamp explosions and fires.
Diesel fuels find use in the fleet of trucks which transport the nations goods. Diesel
engines power these larger engines, and use higher compression ratios (and temperatures)
than their gasoline cousins. They are therefore more efficient. It is also interesting to note
that diesel engines have no spark plugs, instead the fuel-air mixture is ignited by the rising
temperatures and pressures during the compression stroke.
Gas Oil (or fuel oils) are used for domestic heating. In the winter refineries produce more
gas oil, whereas during the summer driving months they produce more gasoline.
Heavy Fuel Oil is often blended with gas oils for easier use in industry. Ships burn heavy
fuel oils but they call it bunker oil.
A Few Terms
Vacuum Residual is the bottom of the barrel. It includes asphalt and some coke.
Pitch is a thick, black, sticky material. It is left behind when the lighter components of coal
tar or petroleum are distilled off. Pitch is a "natural" form of asphalt.
Asphalt is a high boiling component of crude oil. It is therefore found at the "bottom of the
barrel" when petroleum is distilled.
Tars are byproducts formed when coke is made from coal or charcoal is made from wood.
It is a thick, complex, oily black mixture of heavy organic compounds very similar to pitch
or asphalt, though from a different source.
1. INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
Oil refining is a key activity in the CPI.
Over 600 refineries worldwide have a total annual
capacity of more than 3500 x 106 tones.
Goal of oil refining is twofold:
i. production of fuels for transportation, power generation
and heating; and
ii. production of raw materials for the CPI.
Oil refineries are complex plants but are relatively
mature and highly integrated.
Crude Oil
Chemical
Physical
Thermal Catalytic
Distillation Visbreaking Hydro treating
Solvent extraction Delayed coking Catalytic reforming
Propane deasphalting Catalytic cracking
Solvent dewaxing Hydro cracking
Blending Catalytic dewaxing
Alkylation
Polymerization
Isomerization
2. PHYSICAL PROCESSES
How does distillation work?
Distillation is defined as:
a process in which a liquid or vapour mixture of two or
more substances is separated into its component fractions
of desired purity, by the application and removal of heat.
How does distillation work?
Valve trays
Perforations are covered by caps
lifted by vapour, which creates a
flow area and directs the vapour
horizontally into the liquid.
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.
Liquid and vapour flows in a tray column
Liquid and vapour flows in a tray column
Each tray has 2 conduits called
downcomers: one on each side.
Liquid falls by gravity through the
downcomers from one tray to
the tray below.
A weir ensures there is always
some liquid (holdup) on the tray
and is designed such that the the
holdup is at a suitable height, e.g.
such that the bubble caps are
covered by liquid.
Vapour flows up the column and
is forced to pass through the
liquid via the openings on each
tray. The area allowed for the
passage of vapour on each tray is
called the active tray area.
Packings
Packings are passive devices designed to increase the interfacial area for
vapour-liquid contact.
They do not cause excessive pressure-drop across a packed section,
which is important because a high pressure drop would mean that
more energy is required to drive the vapour up the distillation column.
Packed columns are called continuous-contact columns while trayed
columns are called staged-contact columns because of the manner in
which vapour and liquid are contacted.
Basic operation