FCC FEED ADDITIVE FOR PROPYLENE/BUTYLENE MAXIMIZATION
20180327335 ยท 2018-11-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
An injection of a small amount of sweet vacuum residue into an FCC feed consisting of sweet gas oil combined with shape selective technology improves propylene and butylene yields significantly.
Claims
1. A process for increasing the yields of propylene and butylene during the production of olefinic LPG in a fluidized catalytic converter, comprising the steps of: injecting sweet gas oil blended with shape selective catalyst additives into the riser of the FCC; injecting via a separate nozzle sweet vacuum residue for blending with the sweet gas oil and shape selective catalyst additive; and creating incremental gasoline having a high concentration of olefins.
2. The process of claim 1 wherein the high concentration of olefins can be up to 80% by volume.
3. The process of claim 1 wherein the sweet vacuum residue consists of heavy fuel oil.
4. The process of claim 1 wherein the sweet vacuum residue consists of black oil.
5. The process of claim 1 wherein the percent volume of sweet vacuum residue being injected through the separate nozzle ranges from 1% to 5%.
6. The process of claim 1 wherein the observed incremental propylene yields are calculated to be 29.75 volume percent.
7. The process of claim 1 wherein the observed incremental butylene olefin yield is 40.64 volume percent.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0010]
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0011] Co-processing sweet vacuum residue (black oil) alongside sweet gas oil in FCC units is well known in the industry. Such processing has been generally attractive due to the low feed stock costs associated with the alternative disposition (heavy fuel oil or similar) of sweet vacuum residue. However, the properties of sweet vacuum residue make it unattractive as a whole feed to an FCC.
[0012] This invention relates to the process wherein sweet vacuum residue is injected into the reactor riser via a separate feed nozzle. Viewing
TABLE-US-00001 Incremental Yields 2016-2021 Avg. Price 5% Black Oil 2.5% Black Oil Black Oil HT Feed cents/gal Propylene, vol % 12.59 12.14 20.75 11.09 141.91 Propane, vol % 2.94 3.08 2.39 3.22 55 Total C3, vol % 15.53 15.22 27.36 14.91 Isobutane, vol % 9.03 9.68 15.7 10.33 90.15 Norm. Butane, vol % 1.88 2.01 3.07 2.14 92.6 Butylenes, vol % 12.06 11.31 40.64 10.56 223.02 Total C4, vol % 22.97 23.00 21.87 23.03 C5-450 Baseline, vol % 62.85 63.82 26.04 64.78 157.76 450-680 LCO, vol % 10.75 10.75 10.77 10.75 171.67 680+ Slurry vol % 3.49 3.24 15.02 2.09 111.5 178.08 177.82 liquid product value 188.37 177.01 cents/gal 100.27 161.59 feed cost 17.81 16.24 cents/gal margin 7.48 6.82 $/bbl margin
[0013] Due to the high value of olefinic LPG products and low cost of the black oil, this results in improved FCC unit margin. Using 5 year average long term price forecast values. FCC margin with 5% black oil feed is $0.66/bbl higher than with 2.5% black oil in FCC Feed.
[0014] While black oil is a small percentage (0-5 vol %) of the total FCC feed, these impacts still shift the overall FCC C4 olefinicity by over 3%. By comparison, a significant change in FCC fresh catalyst composition at different FCC unit specifically aimed at improving C4 olefinicity has resulted in similar C4 olefinicity impacts (5%),
TABLE-US-00002 5% Black Oil 2.5% Black Oil C4 Olefinicity 52.5% 49.2% C3 Olefinicity 81.1% 79.8%
[0015] The above detailed description of the present invention is given for explanatory purposes. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that numerous changes and modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the whole of the foregoing description is to be construed in an illustrative and not a limitative sense, the scope of the invention being defined solely by the appended claims.