Trends in desulfurization capabilities, processing technologies, and the availability of crude oils: U. S. refineries; Caribbean ''exporting'' refineries
A review of all U.S. refineries and their downstream equipment has led to the conclusion that slightly more than 40 percent of the existing capacity can handle some sour crude of one type or another. For various reasons, this cannot be an exactly defined number, nor does it coincide with the percent of hydroprocessing equipment in relation to crude capacity. A few refineries have hydrotreating facilities and yet only have sweet crude capability. A few refiners may only have capability to handle sour crudes in the lower sulfur ranges, say 0.5 to 1.0 percent, due to emissions problems or other limitations. These are limitations which can be overcome by investments. Still others would face problems in their product output pattern due to low gravity of some sour crudes. Catalytic hydroprocessing (hydrocracking, hydrorefining, and hydrotreating) removes sulfur from refinery streams so that the total amount of sulfur in the products and residues is less than that in the crude oil feedstock. For this reason, changes in hydroprocessing capacity are used to express the changing capabilities of refiners to process sour crudes. On the other hand, thermal processes (vacuum distillation, visbreaking, and coking), segregate most of the sulfur contained in the refinery feedstocks into residual fractions, allowing the production of low sulfur containing products, but the total amount of sulfur in the products and in the residual fractions is essentially the same as that in the crude oil feedstocks. In this regard, thermal processes are limited in their ability to produce low-sulfur products.
- Research Organization:
- Department of Energy, Washington, DC (USA). Office of Oil and Gas Resource Applications
- Sponsoring Organization:
- US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
- OSTI ID:
- 6749230
- Report Number(s):
- DOE/RA-0005
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
The properties and applications of commercial presulfiding agents
A new approach to oil refining with allowance for ecological requirements
Refinery policy in the 1980s: security, economics and equity
Conference
·
Sat Dec 31 23:00:00 EST 1988
·
OSTI ID:5238030
A new approach to oil refining with allowance for ecological requirements
Journal Article
·
Wed Nov 30 23:00:00 EST 1994
· Chemical and Petroleum Engineering
·
OSTI ID:81768
Refinery policy in the 1980s: security, economics and equity
Book
·
Mon Dec 31 23:00:00 EST 1979
·
OSTI ID:6475214
Related Subjects
02 PETROLEUM
020400* -- Petroleum-- Processing
29 ENERGY PLANNING, POLICY, AND ECONOMY
294002 -- Energy Planning & Policy-- Petroleum
AVAILABILITY
CHEMICAL REACTIONS
CRACKING
DECOMPOSITION
DESULFURIZATION
ENERGY SOURCES
FOSSIL FUELS
FUELS
HYDROCRACKING
INDUSTRY
NORTH AMERICA
PETROLEUM
PETROLEUM INDUSTRY
PETROLEUM REFINERIES
PROCESSING
PYROLYSIS
SOUR CRUDES
TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT
THERMOCHEMICAL PROCESSES
USA
020400* -- Petroleum-- Processing
29 ENERGY PLANNING, POLICY, AND ECONOMY
294002 -- Energy Planning & Policy-- Petroleum
AVAILABILITY
CHEMICAL REACTIONS
CRACKING
DECOMPOSITION
DESULFURIZATION
ENERGY SOURCES
FOSSIL FUELS
FUELS
HYDROCRACKING
INDUSTRY
NORTH AMERICA
PETROLEUM
PETROLEUM INDUSTRY
PETROLEUM REFINERIES
PROCESSING
PYROLYSIS
SOUR CRUDES
TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT
THERMOCHEMICAL PROCESSES
USA