• Title of article

    Narrow-cut characterization reveals resid process chemistry

  • Author/Authors

    Chung، نويسنده , , Keng H and Xu، نويسنده , , Chunming، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
  • Pages
    13
  • From page
    1165
  • To page
    1177
  • Abstract
    Supercritical fluid extraction, narrow-cut characterization of bitumen pitch, hydrocracker and once-through coker vacuum resids revealed the unexpected process chemistry of bitumen hydrocracking. Hydrocracking appears to prolong the coke formation process of the end-cut material of bitumen, by converting it to coke precursors. The conversion (or removal) mechanism for most key species (microcarbon residue (MCR), metals, N) in hydrocracking is by partitioning, which is similar to coking. Sulfur species that convert in hydrocracking are from the front-end of bitumen pitch; there is only a small sulfur reduction in the end-cut. n pitch and resid products have similar MCR distribution which is dependent on the “depth” of resid, not the conversion processes. Coke yield did not correlate with the MCR content of narrow-cut feed; coke yield was insignificant at the front-fractions and high at the end-cut. The sub-fractions of bitumen derived resid products have lower H/C ratios than those of bitumen pitch, but have the same MCR content. This can be explained by the pendant-core model, in which bitumen pitch and resid products have the same amount of aromatic cores (coke precursors). The inverse correlation of key species with H/C ratio is process dependent. The reaction products of end-cut (mainly asphaltenes) remained in resid product slate (524°C+ materials) in once-through coking and hydrocracking operations. The implications for the current commercial bitumen upgrading flowsheet are also discussed.
  • Keywords
    Athabasca bitumen , Coking , Hydrocracking , Supercrtical fluid extraction
  • Journal title
    Fuel
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    Fuel
  • Record number

    1462231