Basics of Refinery1
Basics of Refinery1
Basics of Refinery1
Natural gas from the well, while principally methane, contains quantities of
other hydrocarbons - ethane, propane, butane, pentane and also carbon
dioxide and water. These components are separated from the methane at a
gas fractionation plant.
Paraffins
Naphthenes
Aromatics
Hydrocarbons with very few carbon atoms (C1 to C4) are light in density
and are gases under normal atmospheric pressure.
o Distillation (Fractionation)
Liquid fractions are drawn from the trays and removed. In this
way the light gases, methane, ethane, propane and butane pass
out the top of the column, petrol is formed in the top trays,
kerosene and gas oils in the middle, and fuel oils at the bottom.
Residue drawn of the bottom may be burned as fuel, processed
into lubricating oils, waxes and bitumen or used as feedstock for
cracking units.
o Catalytic Reforming
e.g.
catalyst
catalyst
e.g. catalyst
Alkylation
catalyst
Isomerisation
Polymerisation
Air
sulphur oxides
hydrocarbon vapours
smoke
smells
Sulphur enters the refinery in crude oil feed. To deal with this
refineries incorporate a sulphur recovery unit which operates on
the principles described above.
Smells are the most difficult emission to control and the easiest
to detect. Refinery smells are generally associated with
compounds containing sulphur, where even tiny losses are
sufficient to cause a noticeable odour. Highest recovery sulphur
plants and well-designed flare systems ensure emission levels
within norms.
Water
The majority of the water in the refinery is used for cooling the
various process streams. The cooling water does not actually
come into contact with the process material and so has very little
contamination. The cooling water passes through large
"interceptors" which separate any oil from minute leaks etc.,
prior to discharge.
Process water has actually come into contact with the process
streams and so can contain significant contamination. This water
is treated in the "sour water stripper" where the contaminants
(mostly ammonia and hydrogen sulphide) are removed and then
recovered or destroyed in a downstream plant. The process
water, when treated in this way, can be reused in parts of the
refinery.
Land
Bottom line