Alkylation PDF
Alkylation PDF
Alkylation PDF
Jarullah
Alkylation Process
Alkylation is the process of producing gasoline range material light olefins (primarily
propylene and butylene) with isobutane in the presence of a highly acidic catalyst, either
sulfuric acid or hydrofluoric acid. The product (alkylate) contains a mixture of high-octane,
branched-chain paraffinic hydrocarbons.
Refinery gases produced from different units are collected and sent to the gas plant. Olefins
and isobutanes are separated and used as a feed to the alkylation plant to produce gasoline
which can be sent to the gasoline pool.
Alkylation Processes
Alkylation is catalyzed by a strong acid, either sulphuric (H2SO4) or hydrofluoric (HF). In the
absence of catalysts, alkylation between isobutene and olefin must be run under severe
conditions such as T = 500 °C (932 F) and P = 200–400 bars (2940–7080 psia). In the
presence of an acid catalyst, the reaction temperature will be lower than 50 °C (122 F), and
the pressure will be lower than 30 bars (441 psia). The major difference in using either acid is
that isobutane is quite insoluble in H2SO4 but reasonably soluble in HF. This requires the use
of high isobutane/olefin ratios to compensate for low solubility in H2SO4. Furthermore, the
reaction must occur at low temperature. The alkylation process consists of running the
hydrocarbons in liquid form (enough pressure is used to ensure that) and at low temperature
and with a high isobutane (iC4) to olefin (such as C4) ratio. The reaction products are sent to
an acid settler where the acid is recycled back to the reactor. Products are then separated into
gaseous LPG propane and n-butane and the desired product of alkylate. A block diagram of
the process is shown in Figure below:
AlkyClean Process
Lummus technology has developed a solid acid catalyst gasoline alkylation technology. The
AlkyClean process employs a zeolite catalyst coupled with a novel reactor processing to yield
a high quality alkylate product. The process shown in Figure below consists of four main
sections: feedstock pretreatment, reaction, catalyst regeneration and product distillation. An
olefin feed is preheated and fed with the isobutane recycle to the reactor. The reactor operates
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at 50–90 °C (122–194 F) with liquid phase conditions. Multiple reactors are used to allow for
the catalyst regeneration cycle. During regeneration, olefin addition is stopped and hydrogen
is added to achieve a low reactor concentration of dissolved hydrogen while maintaining
liquid phase alkylation reaction conditions. This minimizes energy consumption during the
switching of the operation. The swing reactor coupled with long catalyst life allows the
refiner to work without the need of taking the reactor off-line for moderate temperature
regeneration that restores the catalyst activity completely.
Isobutane Concentration
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Acid Strength
An optimum value of acid strength of 90 wt% H2SO4 is maintained by adding fresh
concentrated acid (98–99 wt%). As the strength of the acid decreases, the acid consumption
increases with the octane number decreases. The minimum acid strength required to operate
the system should not be lower than 85 wt%. To provide a sufficient margin of safety, acid
strength is kept around 90 wt%. The acid strength decreases because of the formation of
gums and other products resulting from the reaction with other impurities. Thus, acid make-
up has to be added.
Degree of Agitation
When the hydrocarbons are dispersed in sulphuric acid, the speed of the impeller determines
the dispersed phase size (droplet diameter) and hence, the interfacial contact area. The
reaction rate of iC4 and C4 is quite fast, and the reaction is controlled by mass transfer. Side
reactions cause the formation of heavy alkylates as given by the following equation
where [iC4] h is the concentration of iC4 in hydrocarbon phase, N is the impeller speed (rpm),
Ha is the fractional acid hold-up, (SV)o is the space olefin velocity (1/h), RHeavy alkylate is the
rate of formation of the undesirable heavy alkylate, and RiC8 is the rate of formation of the
target alkylateiC8 .
Space Velocity
The olefin space velocity is defined as:
The residence time in the reactor is (1/(SV)o ) and is defined as the residence time of the fresh
feed and externally recycled isobutane in the reaction mixture. Since the alkylation reaction is
very fast, the residence time is not a limiting parameter. However, as the space velocity
increases, the octane number tends to decrease while acid consumption tends to increase.
Residence time for sulphuric acid is usually from 5 to 40 min, and for hydrofluoric acid, it is
5–25 min.
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Reaction Temperature
The reaction thermodynamics and kinetics are favoured at low temperatures. Sulphuric acid
alkylation units are operated at 5–10 °C (40–50 F). Above 10 °C, oxidation and side reactions
are promoted, and the deteriorate-alkylate yield and quality while acid consumption
increases. It is impossible to run the reaction below 0 °C (32 F) because acid viscosity will be
too high and agitation becomes difficult.Above 21 °C (70 F), the polymerization of olefin
will occur, and thevoctane number of alkylate decrease. For HF alkylation, the reaction
temperature is less significant and is between 21 and 38 °C (70 and 100 F).
The feed to the reactor consists of olefin V1 (BPD) and a fresh acid make-up of m×1000
(lb/day). The product alkylate yield is V4 (BPD). Therefore, the external isobutane/olefin
ratio (I/O)F = x1 which can be expressed as
The recycled isobutane (V2) can be calculated, since (I/O)F is assumed to be 5–15. The
alkylate yield V4 can be expressed in term of (I/O)F as
If we assume a volumetric shrinkage in alkylate formation from olefin and isobutane of 22%,
thus:
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The acid strength weight percent, x2, could be derived from the acid addition rate m (strength
of 98%), alkylate yield V4 and the acid dilution factor x4 as: