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Sanjiv Singh
General Manager IOCL, Panipat Refinery
FCC
General Description (Rx Rg & Recovery section) Process Flow Diagram FCC Heat Balance FCC Sub Systems Process Variables Catalysts & Additives Present Trend
Questions
REFINING PROCESSES
Primary Process
No chemical change Only physical separation Atmospheric Distillation Vacuum Distillation
Secondary Processes
Desired chemical reactions Carbon rejection processes ( ----- Cracking) Hydrogen addition processes ( Hydro -----)
Treating Processes
Catalytic
Fluidised Catalytic Cracking RFCC Indmax
CATALYTIC CRACKING
Catalytic conversion of VGO (Resid) in FCC Catalyst remains in various stages of fluidisation Continuous regeneration of catalyst Continuous movement of catalyst between Rx & Rg Gives LPG and high octane gasoline Low Cetane TCO Processing resid may require hardware changes Resid processing
requires hardware changes requires higher catalyst addition may require heat removal from regenerator may require feed pretreatment products hydrotreatment may be required
FCC UNIT
To MF
AIR
Steam
Steam Steam
AIR
Back flush
Steam
AIR
AIR AIR
HCO Steam
FF Steam
R E FLUX
MAIN FRACTIONATOR
G AS P LA NT LE A N O IL FE ED CW
RIC H S PO NG E O IL
LC O
STRIP REBO ILER FEED BFW DM W ATER
D IST . P R O D UC T HC O
FEED DeC4 REBO ILER
E FE E D CW PU M P SE A L O IL
Q U EN C H F EE D
RE CY C LE
RE CY C LE F ILT E R
FEED HPS BFW
R E TU RN TE M P W A T ER
DE CA N TE D O IL
HPD PRESATURATOR
1ST SATGE
2ND SATGE
GAS COMPRESSOR
WASH WATER
DEBUTANISER
GASOLINE STRIPPER
PRIMARY ABSORBER
AIR COOLERS
RFCC UNIT
Heat of Reaction Recycle Regenerated Catalyst Regeneration Air Feed Pre-heater Fresh Feed
HEAT BALANCE
Heat generated by burning coke Heat consumed in Rx and .. Cat Cracker adjusts itself to stay in heat balance Links Dependent and Independent variables
Independent Variables
Rx Temperature Feed Preheat Temp Recycle rate / CFR Fresh cat activity / selectivity
Dependent Variables
Regenerator Temp Cat circulation rate Conversion Air requirement
HEAT BALANCE
Delta Coke
Difference between CSC and CRC Amount of coke formed on cat per pass in Rx Equal to the amount of coke burnt off in regenerator A function of
Process parameters Mechanical parameters Feed quality Catalyst type
= =
HEAT BALANCE
Delta Coke is decreased by
Increased Cat / Oil ratio
By increasing Rx temp By reducing CO combustion level By reducing combined feed temperature
Improved feed nozzle dispersion Better stripping Decrease in recycle slurry rate Improved feed quality
Higher API, K factor Lower CCR, boiling range
HEAT BALANCE
Typical Effects of Delta Coke
Regen temp
Cat / oil
HEAT BALANCE
Types of Delta Coke
Catalytic coke
Coke formed by cracking reactions Influenced by the type of catalyst
HEAT BALANCE
Types of Delta Coke
Contaminant Coke
Coke produced as byproduct of contaminant metals (V, Ni, Cu, Fe) dehydrogenation activity Can be a substantial % of total coke for a metal laden catalyst Use of metal passivators can reduce this coke
HEAT BALANCE
Typical Delta Coke Break Down
Zeolite low metal Feed Gas Oil Delta Coke wt% cat % Catalytic 0.52 65 Cat / Oil 0.12 15 Contaminant 0.12 5 Additive/Concar 0.04 15 Zeolite high metal Resid wt% cat % 0.40 29 0.10 14 0.40 29 0.50 28
Total 0.80 100 1.40 100 Rx heat requirement = Rg heat prod = Heat transfer by catalyst
FCC SUBSYSTEMS
Slotted Tip
Proprietary Internals
Oil
Oil
Steam
Slotted Tip
Steam Oil
Slotted Tip
Impact-type Nozzle
High P
Spray Pattern
Strippable coke = Function of stripper efficiency, riser operation & conversion level
Reactor Stripper
Reactor Riser
Denser catalyst particles have more momentum tend to continue in a straight line & get separated from gas stream which more readily take a tortuous flow path
T-Type Disengager
Vented Riser
Direct-Connected Cyclones
High combustion rates minimise unit inventory & maximise catalyst activity
CATALYST MOVEMENT
FREEBOARD
DENSE BED
GAS BUBBLE
AIR INLET
CYCLO NES
CO M BUST IO N RISER
CO M B UST O R
AIR
Cold wall vs. Hot wall design Also protects against chemical corrosion Anchorage
Hex mesh S bars
Methods of application
Mechanically robust to withstand wide range of operations / upsets Erosion, thermal expansion, mechanical integrity of supports Pressure drop across air grid
Cyclones
R IS E R S T R IP P IN G B E D
R IS E R
R IS E R C Y C L O N E
'R O U G H C U T ' C Y C L O N E
P R O C E S S F L O W D IAG AM
R IS E R & R O U G H C U T C Y C L O N E S
More H2, Dry Gas & Coke SOx Emission, S in Product Zeolite Destruction
Basic N2
Aromatics
Con. Coke
High Regen temp, Low Cat/Oil High catalyst consumption to maintain activity
PROCESS VARIABLES
Reactor related
Temperature Cat / Oil ratio Reaction time, Pressure
Regenerator related
CRC, Air rate and distribution Temperature, Pressure, Time Regeneration Design, Mode of regeneration
Feed Stock
Charge rate and recycle Characteristic Preheat temperature
PROCESS VARIABLES
Reactor Temperature
Increasing reactor temperature
Increases cat / oil Increases conversion Increases / decreases gasoline (over cracking point) Increases regenerator temperature Increases C4- yield and olefins Increases gasoline octane Increases LCO aromaticity Increases coke yield Conversion = Feed vol. (LCO + HCO +CLO) vol x100 Feed vol.
PROCESS VARIABLES
GENERAL YIELD DISTRIBUTION
CONVERSION
SEVERITY
PROCESS VARIABLES
GASOLINE
SEVERITY
PROCESS VARIABLES
LPG
SEVERITY
PROCESS VARIABLES
LCO
SEVERITY
PROCESS VARIABLES
Cat / Oil ratio
Typically 5 10 Rapid catalyst separation prevents over cracking Increases conversion and coke levels Controlled by feed preheat, regen temperature At const Rx temp, increased cat/oil ratio will
Increase conversion Increase light gas yield Increase C3 C4 yield Decrease gasoline olefin content Increase aromatic content of gasoline and LCO Increase coke yield
PROCESS VARIABLES
Reaction time
Design method of controlling severity Typically 3 6 sec in riser cracking Varies inversely with velocity A function of feed rate, pressure and temperature Higher time can result in over cracking
Reactor pressure
Normally not varied from design, effects cyclone vel. Varies with feed rate, higher pressure will Lower WGC load, increase MAB load Decrease olefin content, increase coke lay down
PROCESS VARIABLES
Carbon on regen cat
Affects catalyst activity (MAT is C free) Should be as low as reasonably possible Affected by regen temp, O2 partial pr, CSC, residence time, air distribution,
PROCESS VARIABLES
Regenerator design
Spent cat distribution Mixing of catalyst and air Conventionally back mix design High efficiency regenerator
Mode of operation
Partial combustion Complete combustion
PROCESS VARIABLES
Partial combustion
Requirement of CO boiler, higher steam production Operation at lower regen temperature
Less hydrothermal deactivation Less substantial metallurgy Higher CRC
Complete combustion
Reduced coke yield, higher liquid yield More stable operation Higher gasoline octane Higher olefinicity of products
PROCESS VARIABLES
Feed Characteristics
API / UOP K
Change may be due to boiling range and/or crude type UOP K = (CABP)1/3 / SG Higher API
Feed cracks more readily for same Rx temp, higher conversion At constant conversion, higher gasoline yield with lower octane Products will be less olefinic
Higher UOPK
More paraffinic feed Easier to crack
PROCESS VARIABLES
Feed Characteristics
Carbon residue
Indirect measure of coke producing tendency Dependent of crude source (for VGO) or feed mix (for resid) Increase in carbon residue
Increases regenerator temperature (for same crude source) Reduces cat / oil ratio Usually coupled with higher metal levels for resids
Feed preheat
An independent variable An increase in feed preheat
Reduces cat / oil ratio, reduces coke yield Reduces conversion, increases regenerator temperature
Other elements in small amounts Acts like fluid when aerated (fluidised)
Flush Catalyst
Bought out E Cat for metal control
Spent Catalyst
From system From Reactor, Regenerated catalyst
USY
Most widely used zeolite in FCC Higher Si / Al ratio than parent Y zeolite More resistant framework structure
Binder
Glue holding all catalyst components together Provides physical integrity Some binders aid bottoms cracking
Metal Poisoning
Nickel (Ni) & Vanadium (V) deposit on outer layer of catalyst particles and catalyze dehydrogenation & condensation reactions
More Dry gas - can limit WGC capacity More Coke - can limit coke burning capacity
Higher regn. temp. Lower cat/oil ratio Loss in conversion
Ni is about four times more active than V as dehydrogenation catalyst V destroys zeolite structure resulting reduced catalyst surface area & activity
INDMAX Process
Developed by Indian Oil Corporation Ltd. 2000 bbl/day capacity demo plant commissioned in Guwahati Refinery in June03 under regular operation Currently being licensed worldwide by Lummus, USA Processing wide variety of feedstocks upto CCR of 11 wt% 4.17 MMTPA plant at Paradip refinery & 0.74 MMTPA plant at BRPL expected to be commissioned in 2011
Employs proprietary catalyst comprising synergistic components improved metal tolerance Benefits
LPG 35-65 wt% Propylene 17-25 wt% feed High octane gasoline (95+)
Single stage regenerator with complete combustion (CRC <0.05 wt%) without catalyst cooler upto 6 % CCR
Indmax can handle high CCR, non-hydrotreated feed with attractive LPG / light olefins yield
Summary
FCC has been the most profitable & flexible refining process for more than 6 decades because of its ability to meet changing demands Beyond certain feed CCR, RFCC becomes too expensive due to high consumption of catalyst & inferior product yields Increasing gap in propylene demand & supply cant be fulfilled by proposed steam cracker capacity Opportunity to orient FCC operation towards propylene maximization IndianOils proven Indmax technology can meet the refiners objectives of propylene maximization in an cost effective manner
Questions ?