CDU
CDU
CDU
Crude Distillation:
The crude stills are the first major processing units in the refinery. They are used to separate the crude oils by distillation into fractions according to boiling point so that each of the processing units following will have feedstocks that meet their particular specifications. Higher efficiencies and lower costs are achieved if the crude oil separation is accomplished in two steps: 1st by fractionating total crude oil at essentially atmospheric pressure; then by feeding the high-boiling bottoms fraction (topped or atmospheric reduced crude) from the atmospheric still to a second fractionator operated at a high vacuum. The vacuum still is employed to separate the heavier portion of the crude oil into fractions because the high temperatures necessary to vaporize the topped crude at atmospheric pressure cause thermal cracking to occur, with the resulting loss to dry gas, discoloration of the product, and equipment fouling due to coke formation.
DESALTING CRUDE OILS If the salt content of the crude oil is greater than 10 lb/1000 bbl (expressed as NaCl), the crude requires desalting to minimize fouling and corrosion caused by salt deposition on heat transfer surfaces and acids formed by decomposition of the chloride salts. In addition, some metals in inorganic compounds dissolved in water emulsified with the crude oil, which can cause catalyst deactivation in catalytic processing units, are partially rejected in the desalting process. The trend toward running heavier crude oils has increased the importance of efficient desalting of crudes. Until recently, the criterion for desalting crude oils was 10 lb salt/1000 bbl (expressed as NaCl) or more, but now many companies desalt all crude oils. Reduced equipment fouling and corrosion and longer catalyst life provide justification for this additional treatment. Two-stage desalting is used if the crude oil salt content is more than 20 lb/1000 bbl and, in the cases where residua are catalytically processed, there are some crudes for which three-stage desalting is used.
The salt in the crude is in the form of dissolved or suspended salt crystals in water emulsified with the crude oil. The basic principle is to wash the salt from the crude oil with water. Problems occur in obtaining efficient and economical water/oil mixing, water-wetting of suspended solids, and separation of the wash water from the oil. The pH, gravity, and viscosity of the crude oil, as well as the volume of wash water used per volume of crude, affect the separation ease and efficiency. A secondary but important function of the desalting process is the removal of suspended solids from the crude oil. These are usually very fine sand, clay, and soil particles; iron oxide and iron sulfide particles from pipelines, tanks, or tankers; and other contaminants picked up in transit or production. Total suspended solids removal should be 60% or better with 80% removal of particles greater than 0.8 micron in size.
Desalting is carried out by mixing the crude oil with from 3 to 10 vol% water at temperatures from 200 to 300 F (90 to 150 C). Both the ratio of the water to oil and the temperature of operation are functions of the density of the oil. Typical operating conditions are:
The salts are dissolved in the wash water and the oil and water phases separated in a settling vessel either by adding chemicals to assist in breaking the emulsion or by developing a high-potential electrical field across the settling vessel to coalesce the droplets of salty water more rapidly. Either AC or DC fields may be used and potentials from 12,000 to 35,000 volts are used to promote coalescence. For single-stage desalting units 90 to 95% efficiencies are obtained and two-stage processes achieve 99% or better efficiency.
DESALTING
Heavy naphthenic crudes form more stable emulsions than most other crude oils and desalters usually operate at lower efficiencies when handling them. The crude oil densities are close to the density of water and temperature above 280 F (138 C) are needed. It is sometimes necessary to adjust the pH of the brine to obtain pH values of 7 or less in the water. If the pH of the brine exceeds 7, emulsions can be formed because of the sodium naphthenate and sodium sulfide present. For most crude oils it is desirable to keep the pH below 8.0. Better dehydration is obtained in electrical desalters when they are operated in the pH range of 6 to 8 with the best dehydration obtained at a pH near 6. The pH value is controlled by using another water source or by the addition of acid to the inlet or recycled water.
ATMOSPHERIC TOPPING UNIT After desalting, the crude oil is pumped through a series of heat exchangers and its temperature raised to about 550 F (288 C) by heat exchange with product and reflux streams. It is then further heated to about 750 F (399 C) in a furnace (i.e., directfired heater or pipe-still) and charged to the flash zone of the atmospheric fractionators. The furnace discharge temperature is sufficiently high [650 to 750 F (343 to 399 C)] to cause vaporization of all products withdrawn above the flash zone plus about 10 to 20% of the bottoms product.
Reflux is provided by condensing the tower overhead vapors and returning a portion of the liquid to the top of the tower. Although crude towers do not normally use reboilers, several trays are generally incorporated below the flash zone and steam is introduced below the bottom tray to strip any remaining gas oil from the liquid in the flash zone and to produce a high-flash-point bottoms. The steam reduces the partial pressure of the hydrocarbons and thus lowers the required vaporization temperature.
The atmospheric fractionator normally contains 30 to 50 fractionation trays. Separation of the complex mixtures in crude oils is relatively easy and generally five to eight trays are needed for each sidestream product plus the same number above and below the feed plate. The liquid sidestream withdrawn from the tower will contain low-boiling components which lower the flashpoint, because the lighter products pass through the heavier products and are in equilibrium with them on every tray. These light ends are stripped from each sidestream in a separate small stripping tower containing four to ten trays with steam introduced under the bottom tray. . The overhead condenser on the atmospheric tower condenses the pentane and heavier fraction of the vapors that passes out of the top of the tower. This is the light gasoline portion of the overhead, containing some propane and butanes and essentially all of the higher-boiling components in the tower overhead vapor. Some of this condensate is returned to the top of the tower as reflux, and the remainder is sent to the stabilization section of the refinery gas plant where the butanes and propane are separated from the C5-180 F (C5-82 C) LSR gasoline.
Crude Distillation. For simplicity, only two side strippers are shown. Usually at least four are provided to produce extra cuts such as kerosene and Diesel
Vacuum Distillation
VACUUM DISTILLATION The furnace outlet temperatures required for atmospheric pressure distillation of the heavier fractions of crude oil are so high that thermal cracking would occur, with the resultant loss of product and equipment fouling. These materials are therefore distilled under vacuum because the boiling temperature decreases with a lowering of the pressure. Distillation is carried out with absolute pressures in the tower flash zone area of 25 to 40 mmHg. To improve vaporization, the effective pressure is lowered even further (to 10 mmHg or less) by the addition of steam to the furnace inlet and at the bottom of the vacuum tower. Addition of steam to the furnace inlet increases the furnace tube velocity and minimizes coke formation in the furnace as well as decreasing the total hydrocarbon partial pressure in the vacuum tower. The amount of stripping steam used is a function of the boiling range of the feed and the fraction vaporized, but generally ranges from 10 to 50 lb/bbl feed
The effective pressure at the flash zone determines the fraction of the feed vaporized for a given furnace outlet temperature. so it is essential to design the fractionation tower, overhead lines, and condenser to minimize the pressure drop between the vacuum inducing device and the flash zone. A few millimeters decrease in pressure drop will save many dollars in operating costs. The lower operating pressures cause significant increases in the volume of vapor per barrel vaporized and, as a result, the vacuum distillation columns are much larger in diameter than atmospheric towers. It is not unusual to have vacuum towers up to 40 feet in diameter. The desired operating pressure is maintained by the use of steam ejectors and barometric condensers or vacuum pumps and surface condensers. The size and number of ejectors and condensers used is determined by the vacuum needed and the quality of vapors handled. Although more costly than barometric condensers, a recent trend is the use of vacuum pumps and surface condensers in order to reduce the contamination of water with oil.