Petroleum / Crude Oil: Energy Physics - SFG3033
Petroleum / Crude Oil: Energy Physics - SFG3033
Petroleum / Crude Oil: Energy Physics - SFG3033
- Mixtures of hydrocarbons that formed from the remains of animals and plants
(diatoms) that lived millions of years ago in oceans, lakes, and swamps before
dinosaurs roamed the earth.
- Over millions of years, the remains of these animals and plants were covered by
layers of sand, silt, and rock. Heat and pressure from these layers turned the remains
crude oil or petroleum.
- Crude oil and other hydrocarbons exist in liquid or gaseous from in underground pools
or reservoirs, in tiny spaces within sedimentary rocks, and near the earth's surface in
tar (or oil) sands. Petroleum products are fuels made from crude oil and hydrocarbons
contained in natural gas.
- Petroleum products are fuels made from crude oil
and hydrocarbons contained in natural gas.
- The total volume of products refineries produce (output) is greater than the volume of
crude oil that refineries process (input) because most of the products they make have
a lower density than the crude oil they process. This increase in volume is called
processing gain
2.0 Abundance / Renewability
Source:
https://www.bp.com/content/dam/bp/
business-sites/en/global/corporate/p
dfs/energy-economics/statistical-revi
ew/bp-stats-review-2019-oil.pdf
3.0 Accessibility
● Seperation
- Light distillates (petroleum gas, naphtha, and gasoline)
- Middle distillates (kerosene and diesel )
- Heavy distillates (fuel oil, lubricating oil, waxes, and tar )
● Conversion
- , heavy, lower-value distillation fractions can be processed further into lighter,
higher-value products
- Cracking,uses heat, pressure, catalysts, and sometimes hydrogen to
crack heavy hydrocarbon molecules into lighter one.
(fluid catalytic cracking units and hydrocracking/hydrocracker units)
- Storage
Both incoming crude oil and the outgoing final products are stored
temporarily in large tanks on a tank farm near the refinery
4.0 Cost of Production
Brazil 49
Canada 41
United States 36
Iraq 10.70
4.0 Cost of Production
Source:
https://www.indexmundi.com/
commodities/?commodity=cr
ude-oil&months=12
5.0 Safety
● Safe work practices and/or the use of appropriate personal protective equipment may be
needed for exposures to chemicals and other hazards such as heat, and during process
sampling, inspection, maintenance, and turnaround activities.
● Hard hats, safety glasses and goggles, safety shoes, hearing protection, respiratory
protection, and protective clothing such as fire resistant clothing where required
Oil spills
02 The effects on marine and coastal environment
as well as atmosphere
Greenhouse effect
03 The greenhouse gasses and how it may destroys
the Mother Earth
01 6.0 Environmental Impacts
Habitat disruption and rejuvenation
• Deforestation is notably occurring in order for the oil to be extracted.
− Loss of habitat for greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus; GrSG)
that inhabits the sagebrush (Artemisia sp.) ecosystems (Walker el al., 2020).
• Oil spills lead to water pollution (Nabzar, 2011; Shahzad, 2012; Mekonnen,
2015)
− Rise the seabirds mortality notably (Troisi et al., 2016)
− Toxic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in the ingested oil (Troisi et
al., 2016).
03 6.0 Environmental Impacts
Greenhouse effect
• The rise of CO2 (Chen et al., 2019).