Valero Energy, Benicia: - Onkar Kotpalliwar Shivam Singh
Valero Energy, Benicia: - Onkar Kotpalliwar Shivam Singh
Valero Energy, Benicia: - Onkar Kotpalliwar Shivam Singh
BENICIA
-ONKAR KOTPALLIWAR
SHIVAM SINGH
VALERO ENERGY
OVERVIEW
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VALERO ENERGY CORPORATION
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• One of the largest ethanol companies in U.S.
– 11 large‐capacity plants with total of 1.2 billion gallons/year (78,000 BPD) of
production capacity
– All plants located in resource‐advantaged corn belt
• Other investments in alternative energy
– 50 megawatt wind farm in Texas Panhandle
– Seed investments in next generation ethanol and biodiesel
• Approximately 10,015 employees
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Valero’s Geographically Diverse Operations
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BENICIA REFINERY
• The Benicia Refinery is an oil refinery located near the San Francisco Bay Area city
of Benicia, California. Located on 800 acres on the Carquinez Strait, a tributary of
San Francisco Bay
• The refinery was built in 1968 for ExxonMobil. Valero purchased the property in
2000.
• Currently, the refinery processes domestic crude from the San Joaquin Valley in
California and the Alaska North Slope, along with foreign sour crudes.
• Total feedstock throughput capacity of 170,000 barrels per day
• Strategic position allowing refinery to receive feedstocks by both ship and
pipeline
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• Products include propane, butane, CARB gasoline, ultra-low-sulfur diesel (ULSD),
jet fuel, fuel oil, residual oil and asphalt
• Approximately 70 percent of the refinery’s product slate is California Air
Resources Board (CARB) gasoline, California’s clean-burning fuel i.e. without lead
& methyl-tertiary-butyl-ether.
• The refinery also has significant asphalt production capabilities and produces 35
percent of the asphalt supply in northern California.
• Produces 10 percent of the clean-burning CARB gasoline used in California and
25 percent of the CARB used in the San Francisco Bay Area
• Employs approximately 480 personnel
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BENICIA FEEDSTOCKS
Crude slate includes Alaska North Slope (ANS), San Joaquin Valley (SJV) and
a wide variety of other crudes
• 80% received by ship across Refinery docks
• 20% received by pipeline
Shifting crude slate
• When acquired in 2000, 80% of Benicia’s crude was ANS
• Today, less than 40% ANS
Versatile, high-conversion facility with ability to process heavy, sour crudes
• 35% heavy sour, 47% medium/light sour, 2% acidic sweet, 16% other
Capable of processing imported intermediate feedstocks
Primary utilities used include natural gas, electric power and fresh water
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PROCESS
OVERVIEW
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BASIC REFINING CONCEPTS
Intermediates Final Products
< 90°F Propane, Butane and • Refinery fuel gas
C1 to C4 lighter • Propane
• NGLs
90–220°F Straight Run More
Gasoline (low • Gasoline (high octane)
C5 to C8 processing
octane)
Crude oil
220–315°F More • Gasoline (high octane)
Naphtha
Distillation C8 to C12 processing • Jet fuel
Tower
(Crude • Kerosene
Unit) 315–450°F More • Jet fuel
Kerosene
C12 to C30 processing • Diesel
• Fuel oil
Fuel Gas
Propane
Propane
Off Gas Light Ends Dimersol
Butane 5 MBPD
5MBPD Gasoline
LPG
Naphtha
Naphtha/Jet Naphtha
Hydrotreaters
Jet Fuel/Kero 45.3 MBPD
Alkylation Gasoline
Isobutane
20 MBPD
20MBPD
Jet Fuel/Kero
Refinery
Crude Crude
Crude
Gas Oil P/P
Distillation
Distillation
Asphalt Gas Oil
FCCU B -B
134
134 MBPD
MBPD Gas Oil Hydrogen
72 MBPD Gasoline
Catalytic
LPG
Reformer
FCC Feed
FCCFeed Slurry 35 MBPD
35MBPD
Hydrotreater Gasoline
39 MBPD
39 MBPD
ULSD ULSD
LPG
ATBs Diesel 16 MBPD
Naphtha
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• Treatment Processes: To prepare hydrocarbon streams for additional processing
and to prepare finished products. Treatment includes removal or separation of
aromatics and naphthenes, impurities and undesirable contaminants. It involves
chemical or physical separation e.g. dissolving, absorption, or precipitation using
a variety and combination of processes including drying, hydro-desulfurizing,
solvent refining, sweetening, solvent extraction, and solvent dewaxing.
• Formulating and Blending is the process of mixing and combining hydrocarbon
fractions, additives, and other components to produce finished products with
specific performance properties.
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OUTLINE
1. Crude Characteristics
2. Crude Pre-treatment
3. Physical Processes (Distillation)
4. Thermal Processes (Delayed Coking)
5. Catalytic Processes (FCC, Dimersol, Hydrotreating, Catalytic Reforming,
Alkylation)
6. Blending
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CRUDE OIL CHARACHTERISTICS
• Crude oil often contains water, inorganic salts, suspended solids, and water-
soluble trace metals. STEP 0 in the refining process is to remove these
contaminants so as to reduce corrosion, plugging, and fouling of equipment and
to prevent poisoning catalysts in processing units.
• PRETREATMENT TAKES PLACE IN TWO WAYS:
– Field separation
– Crude desalting
• Field separation is the first step to remove the gases, water and dirt that
accompany crude oil coming from the ground. The field separator is often no
more than a large vessel, which gives a quieting zone to permit gravity separation
of three phases: gases, crude oil and water (with entrained dirt).
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• The two most typical methods of crude-oil desalting are chemical and
electrostatic separation, and both use hot water as the extraction agent.
• In chemical desalting, water and chemical surfactant are added to the crude,
which is heated so that salts and other impurities dissolve or attach to the water,
then held in a tank to settle out.
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PHYSICAL
PROCESS
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DISTILLATION
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CRUDE DISTILLATION UNIT
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ATMOSPHERIC DISTILLATION
• The desalted crude feedstock is preheated using recovered process heat. The
feedstock then flows to a direct-fired crude charge heater then into the vertical
distillation column just above the bottom, at pressures slightly above
atmospheric and at temperatures ranging from 340-370°C (above these
temperatures undesirable thermal cracking may occur). All but the heaviest
fractions flash into vapor.
• As the hot vapor rises in the tower, its temperature is reduced. Heavy fuel oil or
asphalt residue is taken from the bottom. At successively higher points on the
tower, the various major products including lubricating oil, heating oil, kerosene,
gasoline, and uncondensed gases (which condense at lower temperatures) are
drawn off.
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VACUUM DISTILLATION
• To further distill the residuum or topped crude from the atmospheric tower
without thermal cracking, reduced pressure is required. The process takes place
in one or more vacuum distillation towers.
• The principles of vacuum distillation resemble those of fractional distillation
except that larger diameter columns are used to maintain comparable vapor
velocities at the reduced pressures.
• A typical vacuum tower may produce gas oils, lubricating oil base stocks, and
heavy residual for propane deasphalting. While, tower operating at lower
vacuum may distill surplus residuum from the atmospheric tower, which is not
used for lube-stock processing, and surplus residuum from the first vacuum
tower not used for deasphalting.
• Vacuum towers are typically used to separate catalytic cracking feedstock from
surplus residuum. 22
THERMAL
PROCESSES
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DELAYED COKING
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• The bottoms of the fractionator are fed to cooker drums via a furnace where the
hot material (440°-500°C ) is held approximately 24 hours (delayed) at pressures
of 2-5 bar, until it cracks into lighter products.
• Vapors from the drums are returned to a fractionator where gas, naphtha, and
gas oils are separated out. The heavier hydrocarbons produced in the
fractionator are recycled through the furnace.
• After the coke reaches a predetermined level in one drum, the flow is diverted to
another drum to maintain continuous operation.
• The full drum is steamed to strip out uncracked hydrocarbons, cooled by water
injection, and de-coked by mechanical or hydraulic methods.
• The coke is mechanically removed by an auger rising from the bottom of the
drum. Hydraulic decoking consists of fracturing the coke bed with high-pressure
water ejected from a rotating cutter. 26
BENICIA REFINERY FLOW DIAGRAM
Fuel Gas
Propane
Propane
Off Gas Light Ends Dimersol
Butane 5 MBPD
5MBPD Gasoline
LPG
Naphtha
Naphtha/Jet Naphtha
Hydrotreaters
Jet Fuel/Kero 45.3 MBPD
Alkylation Gasoline
Isobutane
20 MBPD
20MBPD
Jet Fuel/Kero
Refinery
Crude Crude
Crude
Gas Oil P/P
Distillation
Distillation
Asphalt Gas Oil
FCCU B -B
134
134 MBPD
MBPD Gas Oil Hydrogen
72 MBPD Gasoline
Catalytic
LPG
Reformer
FCC Feed
FCCFeed Slurry 35 MBPD
35MBPD
Hydrotreater Gasoline
39 MBPD
39 MBPD
ULSD ULSD
LPG
ATBs Diesel 16 MBPD
Naphtha
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CATALYTIC CRACKING
• Main incentive for catalytic cracking is the need to increase gasoline production.
Its feedstocks are typically vacuum gas oil.
• Cracking is catalyzed by solid acids which promote the rupture of C-C bonds. The
crucial intermediates are carbocations (+ve charged HC ions) formed by the
action of the acid sites on the catalyst.
• Catalytic cracking was the first large-scale application of fluidized beds which
explains the name fluid catalytic cracking (FCC). 29
FLUID CATALYTIC CRACKING
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FLUID CATALYTIC CRACKING
• The catalyst section contains the reactor and regenerator, which, with the
standpipe and riser, form the catalyst circulation unit. The fluid catalyst is
continuously circulated between the reactor and the regenerator using air, oil
vapors, and steam as the conveying media.
• Preheated feed is mixed with hot, regenerated catalyst in the riser and combined
with a recycle stream, vaporized, and raised to reactor temperature (485-540°C)
by the hot catalyst.
• As the mixture travels up the riser, the charge is cracked at 0.7-2 bar.
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• In modern FCC units, all cracking takes place in the riser and the "reactor" merely
serves as a holding vessel for the cyclones. Cracked product is then charged to a
fractionating column where it is separated into fractions, and some of the heavy
oil is recycled to the riser.
• Spent catalyst is regenerated to get rid of coke that collects on the catalyst during
the process.
• Spent catalyst flows through the catalyst stripper to the regenerator, where most
of the coke deposits burn off at the bottom where preheated air and spent
catalyst are mixed.
• Fresh catalyst is added and worn-out catalyst removed to optimize the cracking
process.
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BENICIA REFINERY FLOW DIAGRAM
Fuel Gas
Propane
Propane
Off Gas Light Ends Dimersol
Butane 5 MBPD
5MBPD Gasoline
LPG
Naphtha
Naphtha/Jet Naphtha
Hydrotreaters
Jet Fuel/Kero 45.3 MBPD
Alkylation Gasoline
Isobutane
20 MBPD
20MBPD
Jet Fuel/Kero
Refinery
Crude Crude
Crude
Gas Oil P/P
Distillation
Distillation
Asphalt Gas Oil
FCCU B -B
134
134 MBPD
MBPD Gas Oil Hydrogen
72 MBPD Gasoline
Catalytic
LPG
Reformer
FCC Feed
FCCFeed Slurry 35 MBPD
35MBPD
Hydrotreater Gasoline
39 MBPD
39 MBPD
ULSD ULSD
LPG
ATBs Diesel 16 MBPD
Naphtha
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– Dimersol E - for oligomerization of ethylene and propylene olefins contained in
FCC gases.
– Dimersol X - for selective dimerization of propylene and butenes for the
production of heptenes or for the dimerization of n-butenes for production of
octenes.
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DIMERSOL PROCESS (IFP)
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• The Dimersol Process proceeds as follows: olefinic feedstock and liquid catalyst, is
charged to the reactor where soluble catalyst is added in low concentration.
• The reaction occurs at essentially ambient temperature, allowing for the
exothermic heat of reaction, at a pressure sufficient to maintain a liquid phase.
• The effluent from reactor enters a drum where ammonia injection neutralizes
the catalyst, forming salts; subsequent water injection dissolves the salts,
removing them from the system. The scale of this washing operation is small
because the catalyst concentration is low - with only about 15 gpm of process
water required for 1000 BPSD of isohexenes product.
• The depropanizer operates to separate the isohexenes from product mixture.
• The level of conversion and the distribution of dimers and oligomers depend on
the number of reactors used in series, the residence time, and the concentration
of catalyst
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HYDROTREATING
• In the reactor, the sulfur and nitrogen compounds in the feedstock are converted
into H2S and NH3.
• The reaction products leave the reactor and after cooling to a low temperature
enter a liquid/gas separator. The hydrogen-rich gas from the high-pressure
separation is recycled to combine with the feedstock, and the low-pressure gas
stream rich in H2S is sent to a gas treating unit where H2S is removed.
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• The clean gas is then suitable as fuel for the refinery furnaces. The liquid stream
is the product from hydrotreating and is normally sent to a stripping column for
removal of H2S and other undesirable components.
• In cases where steam is used for stripping, the product is sent to a vacuum drier
for removal of water.
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CATALYTIC REFORMING
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• A catalytic reformer comprises a reactor and product-recovery section. There is a
feed preparation section comprising a combination of hydro treatment and
distillation.
• Most processes use Pt as the active catalyst. Sometimes Pt is combined with a
second catalyst (bimetallic catalyst) such as rhenium or another noble metal.
• Some reformers operate at low pressure (3-13 bar), others at high pressures (up
to 70 bar). Some systems continuously regenerate the catalyst; in other systems,
one reactor at a time is taken off-stream for catalyst regeneration, and some
facilities regenerate all of the reactors during turnarounds.
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• The first step is preparation of the naphtha feed to remove impurities from the
naphtha and reduce catalyst degradation.
• The naphtha feedstock is then mixed with hydrogen, vaporized, and passed
through a series of alternating furnace and fixed-bed reactors containing a
platinum catalyst.
• The effluent from the last reactor is cooled and sent to a separator to permit
removal of the hydrogen-rich gas stream from the top of the separator for
recycling.
• The liquid product from the bottom of the separator is sent to a fractionators
called a stabilizer (butanizer). It makes a bottom product called reformate;
butanes and lighter go overhead and are sent to the saturated gas plant.
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ALKYLATION
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BLENDING
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IMAGES
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ADU-VDU AND REFORMER
Reactor
Heater
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FCC AND HYDROCRACKER REACTORS
Fluidized Catalytic Cracker
Reactor Hydrocracker Reactors
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Main Column Regenerator
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COKERS & DIMERSOL
DELAYED COKER
Superstructure holds the drill and drill stem
Dimersol - Benicia
while the coke is forming in the drum
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AERIAL VIEW OF BENICIA REFINERY
BENICIA INDUSTRIAL
MAIN PROCESS PARK
AREA
SOUTHAMPTON
ASPHALT PLANT
CRUDE
TANKAGE
BENICIA INDUSTRIES
OLD TOWN
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THANK YOU