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Petroleum Refining: Technology, Economics, and Markets, Sixth Edition

Petroleum Refining: Technology, Economics, and Markets, Sixth Edition

Authors
Publisher Taylor & Francis Inc
Year 16/09/2019
Pages 722
Version hardback
Readership level College/higher education
Language English
ISBN 9781466563001
Categories Petroleum technology
$117.86 (with VAT)
523.95 PLN / €112.33 / £97.52
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Book description

For four decades, Petroleum Refining has guided thousands of readers toward a reliable understanding of the field, and through the years has become the standard text in many schools and universities around the world offering petroleum refining classes, for self-study, training, and as a reference for industry professionals.


The sixth edition of this perennial bestseller continues in the tradition set by Jim Gary as the most modern and authoritative guide in the field. Updated and expanded to reflect new technologies, methods, and topics, the book includes new discussion on the business and economics of refining, cost estimation and complexity, crude origins and properties, fuel specifications, and updates on technology, process units, and catalysts.


The first half of the book is written for a general audience to introduce the primary economic and market characteristics of the industry and to describe the inputs and outputs of refining. Most of this material is new to this edition and can be read independently or in parallel with the rest of the text. In the second half of the book, a technical review of the main process units of a refinery is provided, beginning with distillation and covering each of the primary conversion and treatment processes. Much of this material was reorganized, updated, and rewritten with greater emphasis on reaction chemistry and the role of catalysis in applications.








Petroleum Refining: Technology, Economics, and Markets is a book written for users, the practitioners of refining, and all those who want to learn more about the field.

Petroleum Refining: Technology, Economics, and Markets, Sixth Edition

Table of contents

Part 1. Markets and Economics





Section 1: Industry Structure and Characteristics





1. Performance





1.1 Refinery Supply Chains





1.1.1 Input-Output Model





1.1.2 Infrastructure





1.1.3 Location





1.1.4 Commercial Requirements





1.2 Performance





1.3 Refinery Economics





1.4 Refining Yields





1.5 Refining Margins





1.5.1 Gross Margin





1.5.2 Net Margin and Netback





1.5.3 Application





1.6 Margin Comparisons





1.6.1 Sweet vs. Sour Crude





1.6.2 Cracker vs. Coker Refinery





1.7 Factors That Impact Margins





1.8 Crack Spreads





1.9 Market Data





References





2. Products





2.1 Overview





2.2 Petroleum Gases





2.2.1 Methane





2.2.2 Ethane





2.2.3 Propane





2.2.4 Butane





2.2.5 Natural Gas Liquids





2.3 Light Distillates





2.3.1 Naphthas





2.3.2 Gasolines





2.4 Middle Distillates





2.4.1 Jet Fuel





2.4.2 Kerosene





2.4.3 Automotive Diesel





2.4.4 Marine Diesel





2.4.5 Light Fuel Oil





2.5 Heavy Fuel Oils





2.6 Specialty Products





2.6.1 Base Oils and Lubricants





2.6.2 Engine Oils





2.6.3 Greases





2.6.4 Waxes





2.6.5 Bitumen





2.6.6 Petroleum Coke





2.6.7 Carbon Black





References





3. Processes





3.1 Overview





3.2 Separation





3.2.1 Perfect Batch Distillation





3.2.2 Distillation Curves





3.2.3 Fractions





3.2.4 Atmospheric Distillation





3.2.5 Vacuum Distillation





3.3 Conversion





3.3.1 Thermal Cracking





3.3.2 Catalytic Cracking





3.3.3 Hydrocracking





3.3.4 Coking





3.4 Finishing





3.4.1 Hydrotreating





3.4.2 Catalytic Reforming





3.4.3 Alkylation





3.4.4 Isomerization





References





4. Prices





4.1 Introduction





4.2 Price Formation





4.3 Global Oil and Product Markets





4.4 Price Characteristics





4.4.1 Prices are Volatile





4.4.2 Prices are Unpredictable





4.4.3 Business Cycle Impacts are Periodic





4.4.4 Price Shocks





4.4.5 Market Factors Dominate Price Signals





4.4.6 Private Factors are Secondary in Price Formation





4.5 Supply and Demand





4.5.1 Supply Curves





4.5.2 Demand Curves





4.5.3 Equilibrium





4.6 Market Factors





4.6.1 Demand





4.6.2 Supply





4.6.3 Production Cost





4.6.4 OPEC





4.6.5 Spare Production Capacity





4.6.6 Supply Disruptions





4.6.7 Technology Impacts





4.7 Private Factors





4.7.1 Quality





4.7.2 Yield





4.8 World Production circa 2017





4.9 Refined Product Prices





References





5. Potpourri





5.1 Business Model





5.1.1 Required Spending





5.1.2 Discretionary Spending





5.1.3 Capital Investments





5.2 Company Classification





5.2.1 Firm Type





5.2.2 Ownership





5.2.3 Level of Integration





5.2.4 Business Objectives





5.3. U.S. and World Capacity Trends





5.3.1 Distillation





5.3.2 Coking





5.3.3 Catalytic Cracking





5.3.4 Hydrocracking





5.3.5 Hydrotreating





5.3.6 Reforming, Alkylation, Isomerization





5.3.7 Aromatics and Lubricants





5.3.8 Hydrogen





5.3.9 Sulfur





5.3.10 Asphalt





5.4. U.S. Capacity Correlations





5.5 Market Valuation





5.6 Capital Investment





References





Section 2: Cost Estimation and Complexity





6. Cost Estimation





6.1 Construction Cost Factors





6.1.1 ISBL





6.1.2 USGC Reference





6.1.3 Project Type





6.1.4 Unit Addition vs. Grassroots Refinery





6.1.5 Process Technology





6.1.6 Process Severity





6.1.7 Unit Requirements





6.1.8 Contract Type





6.1.9 Actual vs. Estimated Cost





6.1.10 Time





6.1.11 Location





6.2 Unit Cost





6.2.1 Source Data





6.2.2 Sample Size





6.2.3 Normalization





6.3 Cost Functions





6.3.1 Specification





6.3.2 Dependent Variable





6.3.3 Parameter Estimation





6.3.4 Data Processing





6.3.5 Data Exclusion





6.3.6 Cost Envelopes





6.4 USGC Grassroots Construction Cost





6.5 Operating Cost Factors





6.5.1 Common vs. Unique Factors





6.5.2 Utility Prices





6.5.3 Capacity, Complexity, Age





6.5.4 Time





6.5.5 Location





6.5.6 Exceptional Events





6.6 Operating Expenses





6.6.1 Data Sources





6.6.2 Consolidation Levels





6.7 U.S. Operating Cost Statistics, 2010-2014





References





7. Refinery Complexity





7.1 Ideal Refinery





7.2 Nelson Complexity Index





7.2.1 Motivation





7.2.2 Complexity Factor





7.2.3 Refinery Complexity





7.3 Complexity Factors





7.3.1 Definition





7.3.2 Measurement





7.3.3 Complexity Cross Factor





7.3.4 Uncertainty





7.3.5 Traditional Approach





7.4 Refinery Complexity





7.5 U.S. and World Statistics circa 2018





7.5.1 Regional Capacity





7.5.2 U.S. Refining Complexity





7.5.3 Largest World Refineries





7.5.4 Conversion Capacity





7.5.5 FCC-Equivalent Capacity





7.6 Complexity Equation





7.7 Cost Estimation





7.8 Complexity Factor at Reference Capacity





7.8.1 Specification





7.8.2 U.S. CFRC Statistics





References





8. Classification





8.1 Refinery Categories





8.2 Very Simple Refinery





8.3 Simple Refinery





8.4 Complex Refinery





8.5 Krotz Springs, Louisiana





8.6 St. Paul Park, Minnesota





9. Complexity Applications





9.1 Introduction





9.2 Complexity Functional





9.2.1 Reference Capacity Approach Extension





9.2.2 Factor Functional Average





9.2.3 Evaluation





9.2.4 Closed-Form Expressions





9.2.5 Comparison





9.2.6 U.S. Refinery Complexity





9.3 Complexity Moments





9.4 Spatial Complexity





9.5 Replacement Cost





9.6 Sales Price Models





9.6.1 Asset Transactions





9.6.2 Formulation





9.6.3 Constraints





9.7 Complexity Barrels





9.8 Inverse Problem





9.8.1 Three Refinery Example





9.8.2 Matrix Formulation





References





10. Modern Refineries





10.1 Hydrocracker





10.2 Lubes





10.3 Integrated/Petrochemical





Section 3: Crude Oil and Properties





11. Origin and Composition





11.1 Geologic Time





11.2 Generation, Migration and Accumulation





11.2.1 Source Rock





11.2.2 Generation





11.2.3 Migration





11.2.4 Accumulation





11.2.5 Sedimentary Basins





11.3 The Hydrocarbon Source





11.3.1 Origin





11.3.2 Kerogen Type





11.3.3 Oil Window





11.3.4 Transformation Sequence





11.4 Molecular Composition





11.4.1 Naming Organic Chemicals





11.4.2 Early Classifications





11.4.3 Hydrocarbons





11.4.4 Paraffin (Alkane) Series





11.4.5 Naphthene (Cycloparaffin) Series





11.4.6 Aromatic (Benzene) Series





11.5 Crude Oil Classification





11.5.1 Component Groups





11.5.2 Ternary Diagram





11.5.3 Tissot-Welte Classification





11.5.4 Crude Oil Classes





11.5.6 Marine vs. Nonmarine Organic Matter





11.5.7 High Sulfur vs. Low Sulfur Oils





11.6 Alteration and Thermal Maturity Pathways





11.6.1 Thermal Alteration





11.6.2 Deasphalting





11.6.3 Biodegradation





11.6.4 Water Washing





Reference





12. Crude Quality





12.1 Indicators





12.1.1 Color





12.1.2 Density





12.1.3 Heteroatoms





12.1.4 Chemical Structure





12.1.5 Viscosity





12.2 Classification





12.3 Blends of Crude Oils





12.3.1 Additive Properties





12.3.2 Nonadditive Properties





References





13. Distillation Profile





13.1 Distillation Curves





13.2 Laboratory Methods





13.2.1 Standards





13.2.2 ASTM D86





13.2.3 ASTM D1160





13.2.4 ASTM D2892





13.2.5 ASTM D2887





13.2.6 ASTM D6352, D7169





13.3 Hempel Method





13.3.1 Procedure





13.3.2 40 mmHg Pressure Correction





13.3.3 Temperatures Beyond 790 DegreesF





13.3.4 Gravity Midpercent





13.3.5 Heavy Hydrocarbons





13.4 Distillation Profile Summary





13.5 Hasting Field, Texas





13.6 North Slope Crude, Alaska





References





14. Crude Properties





14.1 Bayon Choctaw and West Hackberry Blends





14.2 Crude Oil Assay





14.3 Chemical Properties





14.3.1 Elemental Analysis





14.2.2 PNA Composition





14.3.3 Carbon Residue





14.4 Composition





14.4.1 Carbon Hydrogen Ratio





14.4.2 Sulfur





14.4.3 Nitrogen





14.4.4 Metals





14.4.5 Asphaltenes





14.4.6 Resins





14.4.7 Waxes





14.4.8 Salt Content





14.4.9 Acid Number





14.5 Physical Properties





14.5.1 Molecular Weight





14.5.2 API Gravity





14.5.3 UOP Characterization Factor





14.5.4 Viscosity





14.5.5 Pour Point





14.5.6 Reid Vapor Pressure





References





15. Fraction Characterization





15.1 Correlation Relations





15.2 Carbon Hydrogen Weight Ratio





15.3 Carbon Residue





15.4 Asphaltene Content





15.5 Molecular Weight





15.6 Aniline Point





15.7 Smoke Point





15.8 Viscosity





15.9 Refractive Index





15.10 Cloud Point





15.11 Pour Point





15.12 Freezing Point





15.13 Cetane Index





15.14 Molecular Type Composition





References





Section 4: Fuel Specifications





16. Standards, Specifications and Fuel Quality





16.1 Types of Specifications





16.2 Consensus Specifications Definitions





16.3 Test Methods





16.4 Transportation Fuel Specifications





16.4.1 Gasoline - ASTM D4814





16.4.2 Jet Fuel - ASTM D1653





16.4.3 Diesel - ASTM D975





16.4.4 European Automotive Fuels





16.5 Mandatory and Suggested Specifications





16.6 Enforcement





16.7 Fuel Quality





16.8 Properties Not in Specifications





References





17. Gasoline





17.1 Introduction





17.2 Octane Number





17.3 Volatility





17.3.1 Vapor Pressure





17.3.2 Distillation Profile





17.3.3 Vapor-Liquid Ratio





17.3.4 Vapor Lock Index





17.3.5 Drivability Index





17.3.6 Volatility Specifications and Schedules





17.4 Composition





17.5 Corrosion





17.6 Storage and Stability





17.7 Energy Content





17.7.1 Heating Value





17.7.2 Power





17.7.3 Fuel Economy





17.8 Additives and Blending Components





17.9 Fuel Ethanol for Blending





17.9.1 Purity





17.9.2 Water, Methanol, Chloride Content





17.9.3 Acidity





17.9.4 Sulfur Content





17.9.5 Denaturants





17.9.6 Workmanship





17.10 Aviation Gasoline





References





18. Jet Fuels





18.1 Introduction





18.2 Specifications





18.3 Fluidity





18.4 Volatility





18.5 Stability





18.6 Heat Content





18.7 Combustion Characteristics





18.8 Composition





18.9 Lubricity





18.10 Corrosion





18.11 Contaminants





18.12 Additives





References





19. Diesel Fuel





19.1 Introduction





19.2 Specification





19.3 Cetane Number





19.4 Distillation





19.5 Flash Point





19.6 Lubricity





19.7 Ash Content





19.8 Carbon Residue





19.9 Low Temperature Operability





19.10 Stability





19.11 Blendstocks





19.12 Biodiesel





19.13 Other Middle Distillate Products





References





20. Product Blending





20.1 Introduction





20.2 Gasoline Blendstocks





20.3 Reid Vapor Pressure





20.3.1 Theoretical Method





20.3.2 Blending Indices





20.4 Octane Blending





20.5 Blending for Other Properties





20.6 Gasoline Blending Case Study





20.7 Ethanol Blending





20.8 Diesel and Jet Fuel Blendstocks





References





Part 2 - Technology





Section 5: Separation Processes





21. Crude Oil Desalting





21.1 Introduction





21.2 Desalting Technology





21.2.1 General Description





21.2.2 Tight Emulsions and Metal Containing Organic Compounds





References





22. Crude Oil Distillation





2.1 Introduction





22.2 Atmospheric Distillation





22.2.1 General Description





22.2.2 Front-End Design Configurations





22.2.3 Light Naphtha Stabilizer Column





22.3 Vacuum Distillation





References





23. Solvent Deasphalting





23.1 Introduction





23.2 Solvent Deasphalting Technology





23.2.1 General Description





23.2.2 Bitumen Froth Treatment





23.3 Deasphalting





23.3.1 Oil Solubility





23.3.2 Asphaltenes





References





Section 6: Residue Conversion Processes





24. Visbreaking





24.1 Introduction





24.2 Visbreaking Technology





24.2.1 Feed Material





24.2.2 General Description





24.2.3 Hydrovisbreaking and Hydrogen Donor Visbreaking





24.3 Thermal Cracking





24.3.1 Reaction Chemistry





24.3.2 Conversion





24.3.3 Equivalent Residence Time





24.4 Visbreaker Operation





24.4.1 Operating Parameters





24.4.2 Fuel Properties





24.4.3 Feed Pretreatment





References





25. Coking





25.1 Introduction





25.2 Coking Technology





25.2.1 Feed Material





25.2.2 Delayed Coking





25.2.3 Fluid Coking





25.3 Thermal Carbonization





25.3.1 Reaction Chemistry and Phase Separation





25.3.2 Role of Solids





25.4 Delayed Coker Operation





25.4.1 Operating Parameters





25.4.2 Coke Properties





25.4.3 Fuel Properties





25.4.4 Yield Estimation





25.5 Fluid Coker Operation





25.5.1 Operating Parameters





25.5.2 Fuel Properties





25.5.3 Yield Estimates





References





26. Residue Hydroconversion





26.1 Introduction





26.2 Residue Hydroconversion Technology





26.2.1 Feed Material





26.2.2 Reactor Types





26.2.3 Fixed Bed Residue Hydroconversion





26.2.4 Moving Bed Residue Hydroconversion





26.2.5 Ebullated Bed Residue Hydroconversion





26.5.6 Slurry Bed Residue Hydroconversion





26.3 Thermal Conversion Combined with Catalytic Hydrotreating





26.3.1 Reaction Chemistry





26.3.2 Sediment Formation





26.3.3 Residue Hydroconversion Catalysts





26.4 Residue Hydroconversion Operation





26.4.1 Operating Parameters





26.4.2 Product Yields





References





27. Fluid Catalytic Cracking





27.1 Introduction





27.2 Fluid Catalytic Cracking Technology





27.2.1 Feed Material





27.2.2 General Description





27.2.3 Residue Fluid Catalytic Cracking





27.2.4 FCC for Petrochemicals Production





27.3 Catalytic Cracking





27.3.1 Reaction Chemistry





27.3.2 Conversion





27.3.3 FCC Catalysts





27.3.4 Catalyst Deactivation and Equilibrium Catalyst





27.3.5 Catalyst Additives





27.4 Fluid Catalytic Cracking Operation





27.4.1 Operating Parameters





27.4.2 Pressure Balance





27.4.3 Heat Balance





27.4.4 Fuel Properties





27.4.5 Feed Pretreating





27.4.6 Yield Estimation





References





28. Hydrocracking





28.1 Introduction





28.2 Hydrocracking Technology





28.2.1 Feed Material





28.2.2 General Description





28.2.3 Hydroisomerization to Produce Lubricant Base Oil





28.2.4 Hydrodewaxing





28.4.5 Mild Hydrocracking





28.3 Catalytic Hydrocracking





28.3.1 Reaction Chemistry





28.3.2 Conversion





28.3.3 Hydrocracking Catalysts





28.3.4 Competitive Adsorption





28.4 Hydrocracker Operation





28.4.1 Operating Parameters





28.4.2 Fuel Properties





28.4.3 Yield Estimates





References





Section 7: Distillate, Naphtha, and Gas Conversion Processes





29. Hydrotreating





29.1 Introduction





29.2 Hydrotreating Technology





29.2.1 Feed Material





29.2.2 General Description





29.3 Catalytic Hydrotreating





29.3.1 Reaction Chemistry





29.3.2 Reaction Thermodynamics





29.3.3 Conversion





29.3.4 Hydrotreating Catalysts





29.4 Hydrotreater Operation





References





30. Butane and Naphtha Hydroisomerization





30.1 Introduction





30.2 C4-C6 Hydroisomerization Technology





30.2.1 Feed Material





30.2.2 General Description





30.2.3 Process Configurations with Recycle





30.3 Catalytic Hydroisomerization





30.3.1 Reaction Chemistry





30.3.2 Reaction Thermodynamics





30.3.3 Hydroisomerization Catalysts





30.4 C4-C6 Hydroisomerization Operation





30.4.1 Operating Parameters





30.4.2 Fuel Properties





References





31. Catalytic Naphtha Reforming





31.1 Introduction





31.2 Naphtha Reforming Technology





31.2.1 Feed Material





31.2.2 General Description





31.2.3 Catalyst Regeneration Configurations





31.2.4 Catalyst Regeneration





31.2.5 Aromatization for Petrochemical Production





31.3 Catalytic Naphtha Reforming





31.3.1 Reaction Chemistry





31.3.2 Conventional Reforming Catalysts





31.4 Catalytic Naphtha Reforming Operation





31.4.1 Operating Conditions





31.4.2 Fuel Properties





31.4.3 Yield Estimation





References





32. Aliphatic Alkylation





32.1 Introduction





32.2 Aliphatic Alkylation Technology





32.2.1 Feed Material





32.2.2 HF Catalyzed Aliphatic Alkylation





32.2.3 H2SO4 Catalyzed Aliphatic Alkylation





32.2.4 Comparison of HF and H2SO4 Catalyzed Processes





32.3 Reaction Chemistry





32.3.1 Liquid Acid Catalysts





32.3.2 Solid Acid Catalysts





32.4 Aliphatic Alkylation Operation





32.4.1 Operating Parameters





32.4.2 Fuel Properties





References





33. Olefin Oligomerization





33.1 Introduction





33.2 Olefin Oligomerization Technology





33.2.1 Feed Material





33.2.2 Fixed Bed Olefin Oligomerization





33.2.3 Liquid Phase Olefin Oligomerization





33.2.4 Catalyst Selection





33.2.5 Refinery Benzene Reduction





33.3 Reaction Chemistry





33.3.1 Acid Catalysts





33.3.2 Organometallic Catalysts





33.4 Oligomerization Operation





33.4.1 Operating Parameters





33.4.2 Fuel Properties





References





34. Etherification





34.1 Introduction





34.2 Etherification Technology





34.2.1 Feed Material





34.2.2 General Description





34.3 Etherification





34.3.1 Reaction Chemistry





34.3.2 Reaction Thermodynamics





34.3.3 Etherification Catalysts





34.4 Etherification Operation





34.4.1 Operating Parameters





34.4.2 Volumetric Yield





34.4.3 Fuel Properties of Alcohols and Ethers





References





Section 8: Lubricants and Supporting Technologies





35. Lubricant Base Oils





35.1 Introduction





35.2 Lubricant Base Oil Production Technology





35.2.1 Feed Material





35.2.2 Technology Selection





35.2.3 Propane Deasphalting





35.2.4 Solvent Extraction





35.2.5 Solvent Dewaxing





35.2.6 Clay Treating





References





36. Supporting Technologies





36.1 Hydrogen Production and Purification





36.2 Light Hydrocarbon Gas Processing





36.3 Acid Gas Removal





36.4 Sulfur Recovery From Acid Gas





36.4.1 Claus Process





36.4.2 Claus Tail Gas Treatment





References









Appendix A. Definitions







Appendix B. Chapter Discussion





Appendix C. Chapter Problems

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